Adler Gail K, Stowasser Michael, Correa Ricardo R, Khan Nadia, Kline Gregory, McGowan Michael J, Mulatero Paolo, Murad M Hassan, Touyz Rhian M, Vaidya Anand, Williams Tracy A, Yang Jun, Young William F, Zennaro Maria-Christina, Brito Juan P
Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
Endocrine Hypertension Research Centre, University of Queensland, Princess Alexandra Hospital, QLD 4102, Brisbane, Australia.
J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2025 Aug 7;110(9):2453-2495. doi: 10.1210/clinem/dgaf284.
Primary aldosteronism (PA), a primary adrenal disorder leading to excessive aldosterone production by one or both adrenal glands, is a common cause of hypertension. It is associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular complications compared with primary hypertension. Despite effective methods for diagnosing and treating PA, it remains markedly underdiagnosed and undertreated.
To develop an updated guideline that provides a practical, clinical approach to identifying and managing PA to improve diagnosis rates and encourage targeted treatment.
The Guideline Development Panel (GDP), composed of a multidisciplinary panel of clinical experts and experts in systemic review methodology, used the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) approach to define 10 questions related to the diagnosis and treatment of PA. Systematic reviews were conducted for each question. The GDP used the GRADE Evidence to Decision (EtD) framework to consider contextual factors, such as stakeholder values and preferences, costs and required resources, cost-effectiveness, acceptability, feasibility, and the potential impact on health equity.
We suggest that all individuals with hypertension be screened for PA by measuring aldosterone and renin and determining the aldosterone to renin ratio, and that subsequent clinical care be guided by the results. We suggest that individuals with PA receive PA-specific therapy, either medical or surgical. In individuals who screen positive for PA, we suggest (1) commencement of PA-specific medical therapy in individuals who do not desire or are not candidates for surgery and in situations where the probability of lateralizing PA (excess aldosterone produced by one adrenal) is low based on screening results; and (2) aldosterone suppression testing in situations when screening results indicate an intermediate probability for lateralizing PA and individualized decision making confirms a desire to pursue eligibility for surgical therapy. In those who test positive by aldosterone suppression testing, and in those in whom screening results show a high probability of lateralizing PA (obviating the need for aldosterone suppression testing), we suggest adrenal lateralization with computed tomography scanning and adrenal venous sampling prior to deciding the treatment approach (medical vs surgical). In all individuals with PA and an adrenal adenoma, we suggest performing a 1-mg overnight dexamethasone suppression test. We suggest the use of mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists (MRAs) over epithelial sodium-channel (ENaC) inhibitors in the medical treatment of PA. We suggest the use of spironolactone over other MRAs, given its lower cost and greater availability; however, all MRAs, when titrated to equivalent potencies, are anticipated to have similar efficacy in treating PA. Thus, MRAs with greater mineralocorticoid receptor specificity and fewer androgen/progesterone receptor-mediated side effects may be preferred in some situations. In individuals receiving MRA therapy, we suggest monitoring renin and, in those whose hypertension remains uncontrolled and renin is suppressed, titrating the MRA to increase renin.
These recommendations provide a practical framework for the diagnosis and treatment of PA. They are based on currently available literature and take into consideration outcomes that are important to key stakeholders. The goal is to increase identification of individuals with PA and, by initiating PA-specific medical or surgical therapy, improve blood pressure control and reduce PA-associated adverse cardiovascular events. The guidelines also highlight important knowledge gaps in PA diagnosis and management.
原发性醛固酮增多症(PA)是一种原发性肾上腺疾病,导致一侧或双侧肾上腺分泌过多醛固酮,是高血压的常见病因。与原发性高血压相比,它与心血管并发症风险增加有关。尽管有有效的PA诊断和治疗方法,但它仍明显诊断不足和治疗不足。
制定一份更新的指南,提供一种实用的临床方法来识别和管理PA,以提高诊断率并鼓励针对性治疗。
指南制定小组(GDP)由临床专家和系统评价方法专家组成的多学科小组组成,采用推荐分级、评估、制定和评价(GRADE)方法来确定10个与PA诊断和治疗相关的问题。对每个问题进行了系统评价。GDP使用GRADE证据到决策(EtD)框架来考虑背景因素,如利益相关者的价值观和偏好、成本和所需资源、成本效益、可接受性、可行性以及对健康公平性的潜在影响。
我们建议通过测量醛固酮和肾素并确定醛固酮与肾素比值对所有高血压患者进行PA筛查,并根据结果指导后续临床护理。我们建议PA患者接受针对PA的治疗,无论是药物治疗还是手术治疗。对于PA筛查呈阳性的个体,我们建议:(1)在不希望或不适合手术的个体以及根据筛查结果PA侧化(一侧肾上腺产生过多醛固酮)概率较低的情况下,开始针对PA的药物治疗;(2)当筛查结果表明PA侧化概率中等且个体化决策确认希望寻求手术治疗资格时,进行醛固酮抑制试验。在醛固酮抑制试验呈阳性的个体以及筛查结果显示PA侧化概率高(无需进行醛固酮抑制试验)的个体中,我们建议在决定治疗方法(药物治疗与手术治疗)之前,先进行计算机断层扫描和肾上腺静脉采样以确定肾上腺侧别。对于所有患有PA和肾上腺腺瘤的个体,我们建议进行1毫克过夜地塞米松抑制试验。在PA的药物治疗中,我们建议使用盐皮质激素受体拮抗剂(MRAs)而非上皮钠通道(ENaC)抑制剂。鉴于螺内酯成本较低且更易获得,我们建议使用螺内酯而非其他MRAs;然而,所有MRAs在滴定至等效效力时,预计在治疗PA方面具有相似的疗效。因此,在某些情况下,具有更高盐皮质激素受体特异性且雄激素/孕激素受体介导的副作用较少的MRAs可能更受青睐。在接受MRA治疗的个体中,我们建议监测肾素,对于高血压仍未得到控制且肾素被抑制的个体,滴定MRA以增加肾素。
这些建议为PA的诊断和治疗提供了一个实用框架。它们基于当前可用的文献,并考虑了对关键利益相关者重要的结果。目标是增加PA患者的识别,并通过启动针对PA的药物或手术治疗,改善血压控制并减少与PA相关的不良心血管事件。这些指南还突出了PA诊断和管理中重要的知识空白。