z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
SAT-543 Human Hair Aldosterone Measurements for Evaluation of Primary Aldosteronism
Author(s) -
Andrew P. Demidowich,
Jancarlos Camacho,
Maria De La Luz Sierra,
Elena Belyavskaya,
Charalampos Lysikatos,
Crystal Kamilaris,
Mari Suzuki,
Mihail Zilbermint,
Fady HannahShmouni,
Constantine A. Stratakis
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of the endocrine society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.046
H-Index - 20
ISSN - 2472-1972
DOI - 10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.1572
Subject(s) - aldosterone , primary aldosteronism , endocrinology , medicine , urine , scalp , surgery
Background: Primary Aldosteronism (PA) is the most common cause of endocrine hypertension in US. Diagnostic techniques such as a 24 hour urine collection or saline suppression test (SST) can be laborious for both patients and staff. Our group previously showed that human hair cortisol measurements correlated with urine and serum cortisol levels in patients with endogenous cortisol excess. In this study, we explored whether human hair aldosterone correlated with other measures of aldosterone production. Methods: 41 adult subjects were evaluated at the NIH Clinical Center for adrenal disorders. A pencil-width of hair near the occiput was removed, and the 1cm segment closest to the scalp was analyzed by enzyme immunoassay for aldosterone, reported as pg aldosterone/mg dry hair. Not all subjects underwent complete workup for PA. Data were transformed as necessary to maintain assumptions of normality. Student’s t-test and Pearson correlations were used for statistical analysis. Results: Of the evaluated subjects, 18 were diagnosed with PA, 22 subjects did not have PA, and 1 subject was indeterminate. The mean hair weight was 33.0±13.7mg. For hair samples weighing greater than 10mg, hair weight was not correlated with hair aldosterone concentration (p=0.40). There was no difference in measured hair aldosterone between the subjects with and without PA (2.01±1.09 vs. 2.52±2.45 pg/mg; p=0.82). Among all subjects, hair aldosterone did not correlate with serum aldosterone (p=0.92), aldosterone-to-renin ratio (ARR; p=0.94), 24 hour urine aldosterone (Ualdo; p=0.85), or the serum aldosterone at the 4 hour time point of a SST (4hrAldo; p=0.98). Serum aldosterone, ARR, Ualdo, and 4hrAldo all correlated highly amongst each other (all p’s<0.001). Conclusions: Hair aldosterone levels do not correlate with other markers of PA. Further work is needed to understand whether optimization of study conditions could improve the usefulness of hair aldosterone measurements in the evaluation of PA.

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here