Subtyping of Primary Aldosteronism in the AVIS-2 Study: Assessment of Selectivity and Lateralization
Author(s) -
Giacomo Rossitto,
Laurence Amar,
Michel Azizi,
Anna Riester,
Martín Reincke,
Christoph Degenhart,
J Widimský,
Mitsuhide Naruse,
Jaap Deinum,
L. SchultzeKool,
Tomaž Kocjan,
Aurelio Negro,
Ermanno Rossi,
Gregory Kline,
Akiyo Tanabe,
Fumitoshi Satoh,
Lars Christian Rump,
Oliver Vonend,
Holger S. Willenberg,
Peter J. Fuller,
Jun Yang,
Nicholas Yong Nian Chee,
Steven B. Magill,
Zulfiya Shafigullina,
Marcus Quinkler,
Anna Oliveras,
ChinChen Chang,
VinCent Wu,
Z. Šomlóová,
Giuseppe Maiolino,
Giulio Barbiero,
Michele Battistel,
Livia Lenzini,
Emilio Quaia,
Achille C. Pessina,
Gian Paolo Rossi
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
the journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.206
H-Index - 353
eISSN - 1945-7197
pISSN - 0021-972X
DOI - 10.1210/clinem/dgz017
Subject(s) - primary aldosteronism , cosyntropin , medicine , hyperaldosteronism , blood pressure , aldosterone , adrenocorticotropic hormone , hormone
Context Adrenal venous sampling (AVS) is the key test for subtyping primary aldosteronism (PA), but its interpretation varies widely across referral centers and this can adversely affect the management of PA patients. Objectives To investigate in a real-life study the rate of bilateral success and identification of unilateral aldosteronism and their impact on blood pressure outcomes in PA subtyped by AVS. Design and settings In a retrospective analysis of the largest international registry of individual AVS data (AVIS-2 study), we investigated how different cut-off values of the selectivity index (SI) and lateralization index (LI) affected rate of bilateral success, identification of unilateral aldosteronism, and blood pressure outcomes. Results AVIS-2 recruited 1625 individual AVS studies performed between 2000 and 2015 in 19 tertiary referral centers. Under unstimulated conditions, the rate of biochemically confirmed bilateral AVS success progressively decreased with increasing SI cut-offs; furthermore, with currently used LI cut-offs, the rate of identified unilateral PA leading to adrenalectomy was as low as <25%. A within-patient pairwise comparison of 402 AVS performed both under unstimulated and cosyntropin-stimulated conditions showed that cosyntropin increased the confirmed rate of bilateral selectivity for SI cut-offs ≥ 2.0, but reduced lateralization rates (P < 0.001). Post-adrenalectomy outcomes were not improved by use of cosyntropin or more restrictive diagnostic criteria. Conclusion Commonly used SI and LI cut-offs are associated with disappointingly low rates of biochemically defined AVS success and identified unilateral PA. Evidence-based protocols entailing less restrictive interpretative cut-offs might optimize the clinical use of this costly and invasive test. (J Clin Endocrinol Metab XX: 0-0, 2020)
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