Untargeted Metabolomics for Primary Aldosteronism
Primary AldosteronismPrimary aldosteronism (PA) is a common and likely under-diagnosed cause of secondary hypertension with associated cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Current diagnosis comprises screening, confirmatory testing and sub-type classification (lateralisation) to distinguish unilateral disease (requiring surgery) from bilateral disease (requiring medical management). This multi-step process is complex and variable with a lack of uniformity in diagnostic protocols, standardised/reference assay methodologies, and diagnostic thresholds. There is evidence in the literature that targeted serum steroid panels may have a role in diagnosis of PA, and both targeted steroid panels and untargeted metabolomics in serum and urine are a promising area of research. This study aims to identify and recruit participants (n=40; 20 with confirmed PA and 20 with other causes of hypertension) willing to donate lithium heparin plasma for a metabolomics pilot study. This plasma will be interrogated through untargeted metabolomics using gas/liquid chromatography-mass-spectrometric methods and computational data processing to allow power calculations and inform experimental design for future studies. The utility of metabolites from the metabolomics dataset will be evaluated by comparison against current biomarkers for screening, diagnosis and lateralisation as well as radiology and histology acquired through routine diagnostic work-up. The long-term aim for larger studies is to identify suitable candidate analytes in plasma for future development into targeted, clinically-useful analyte panels.
Prospective Evaluation of Confirmatory Testing For Primary Aldosteronism
Primary AldosteronismThis study is to evaluate the performance characteristics of the seated saline infusion test and the ultra low-dose ACTH stimulation test for the diagnosis of primary aldosteronism.
A Prospective Cohort Study for Patients With Adrenal Diseases
Adrenal AdenomaCushing Syndrome4 moreThe purpose of this study is to investigate the pathologic features, complications, and prognostic factors of functioning adrenal adenoma and suggest follow-up algorithms for adrenal incidentaloma.
Nuclear Imaging for Subtype Diagnosis of Primary Aldosteronism
Primary AldosteronismThis study is to evaluate the accuracy of a novel radiopharmaceutical tracer, para-chloro-2-[18F]fluoroethyl etomidate (CETO), used with positron emission tomography (PET) and computed tomography (CT), as a way to subtype unilateral vs. bilateral forms of Primary Aldosteronism, compared to AVS as a reference gold standard.
Renal Sympathetic Denervation From The Adventitia on Hypertension
Primary Aldosteronism Due to Aldosterone Producing AdenomaRenal sympathetic denervation from the intima of renal arteries has become an important method for the treatment of resistant hypertension, but renal sympathetic nerve are mainly located in the adventitia, and there is no report about renal sympathetic denervation from the renal adventitia. Primary aldosteronism is an important factor of secondary hypertension, tumor aldosterone in unilateral adrenal can increase the concentration of plasma aldosterone, in some patients blood pressure control is still not desirable after resection of tumor aldosterone. This study intends to conduct renal sympathetic denervation ablation from the adventitia to observe its efficacy and safety on blood pressure of patients with primary aldosterone.
Open-label Study on Treatment of Primary Aldosteronism With Everolimus
Primary AldosteronismThe overall objective is to evaluate everolimus as an aldosterone-lowering drug in the treatment of primary hyperaldosteronism.
Adrenal Artery Ablation Treats Primary Aldosteronism
Primary AldosteronismHypertensionPrimary aldosteronism (PA) is one of the most common cause of endocrine and resistant hypertension. Current studies have shown that the activation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) and the increased sympathetic nerve activity in the central or local tissue are the key mechanisms of high blood pressure and its organ damages. The classical method for diagnosis of primary aldosteronism depends on the detection of peripheral venous blood aldosterone level, which is incapable of accurate positioning diagnosis. On the other hand, the current guidelines recommend that surgery and aldosterone receptor inhibitors were the only treatment for primary aldosteronism. However, only about 35% of aldosterone tumors and a small part of unilateral adrenal hyperplasia can be treated by surgery. More than 60% of idiopathic aldosteronism and bilateral adrenal hyperplasia need long-term drug therapy. However, long-term aldosterone inhibitor treatment may also cause hyperkalemia, male breast hyperplasia, female hirsutism and other adverse reactions. Therefore, the investigators proposed that endovascular chemical partial ablation of the adrenal gland can lower the aldosterone level, reduce the blood pressure and recover the potassium metabolism balance. In order to confirm the above effects, the investigators conduct an open, prospective, positive controlled study in patients with primary aldosteronism patients (including aldosterone, idiopathic aldosteronism and adrenal hyperplasia). The effects on blood pressure, blood electrolytes, adrenal hormones, metabolic indexes, target organ damages were observed to explore the efficacy and safety of the endovascular ablation of the adrenal gland in the treatment of primary aldosteronism.
The Long-term Effect of SAAE and Medical Treatment for Primary Aldosteronism
Primary AldosteronismIn this prospective controlled trial, we aim to determine whether superselective adrenal artery embolization is superior to medical treatment for patients with PA who refuse surgery for medication. Patients age 18 to 75 years with hypertension will be screened for the presence of PA according to Endocrine Society Clinical Practice Guidelines. Patients with confirmed PA are counseled on the treatment option, including adrenalectomy. Those who opt to enroll in the study choice either SAAE or spironolactone (20-60mg daily) therapy (medical group). In both groups, if office blood pressure exceeds 140/90mmHg, amlodipine and terazosin will sequentially be added to the initial therapy form month 1 to year 3. The primary endpoint is the change in blood pressure, and the secondary end point is the change in biochemical outcomes. The Primary Aldosteronism Surgical Outcome criteria are used to classify clinical and biochemical outcomes as complete, partial, or absent success.
DP13 - A Phase II Study in Patients With Primary Aldosteronism
Primary AldosteronismThe purpose of the present phase II study is to determine whether DP13 displays the clinical safety and efficacy profile to support further development in patients with primary aldosteronism.
Etiology of Sleep Apnea-related Hyperaldosteronism - BP Treatment
Obstructive Sleep ApneaResistant Hypertension1 moreHypertension affects an estimated 60-70 million Americans, predisposing them to potentially life threatening cardiovascular complications. Resistant hypertension, defined as uncontrolled blood pressure on 3 or more different antihypertensive agents, is common, affecting 15-20% of the entire hypertensive population or an estimated 12-14 million Americans. Although associated with obesity, increasing age, black race, and chronic kidney disease, mechanisms of treatment resistance remain obscure. The investigators' laboratory identified primary aldosteronism (PA) as a common cause of treatment resistance with a prevalence of 20% among subjects with resistant hypertension. This is clinically important because recognition of PA can lead to effective treatment with use of aldosterone blockers. Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is strongly associated with and predicts development of hypertension as demonstrated in landmark cohort studies including the Sleep Heart Health Study and the Wisconsin Sleep Cohort Study. The investigators' laboratory has confirmed OSA to be extremely common in subjects with resistant hypertension, with a prevalence of approximately 85%. Recognizing that PA and OSA are exceptionally common in subjects with resistant hypertension, the investigators hypothesized that the 2 may be causally related. In testing this hypothesis, the investigators recently reported that plasma aldosterone levels are positively correlated with OSA severity in subjects with resistant hypertension but not in normotensive control subjects. This observation suggests that there is an important mechanistic interaction between untreated OSA and aldosterone excess in subjects with resistant hypertension. While the investigators' original hypothesis was that OSA stimulates aldosterone release, the investigators recognize that the opposite may also be true; that is, aldosterone excess in subjects with resistant hypertension worsens OSA. Distinguishing between these two possibilities has potentially far-reaching clinical implications. If the former hypothesis is true, effective treatment of OSA would be expected to suppress aldosterone release in subjects with resistant hypertension, thereby reversing the underlying cause of their treatment resistance. If the latter hypothesis is true, use of mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists would be expected to reduce OSA severity in subjects with resistant hypertension, thereby enhancing treatment of OSA. Either scenario would represent a new treatment approach for a highly prevalent and serious medical problem.