ESPE2021 Symposia Endocrine Hypertension - Aetiology Directed Management (2 abstracts)
Medizinische Klinik und Poliklinik IV, Klinikum der Universität München, Campus Innenstadt, Munich, Germany
Endocrine disorders are the most common causes of secondary hypertension. Early diagnosis and treatment is crucial for prevention of cardiovascular complications. Several rare but important entities like Cushing’s syndrome and pheochromocytoma/paraganglioma can cause endocrine hypertension, in contrast to primary aldosteronism, which is quite frequent. Definition, classification and prevalence: With a prevalence of 6% in unselected patients with hypertension, 5 to 12% of hypertensive patients in specialized outpatient clinics and 23% in therapy-refractory patients, primary hyperaldosteronism (PA) is the most common cause of surgically treatable secondary hypertension. The causes of PA are usually a unilateral aldosterone-producing adrenal adenoma (APA) or bilateral (micronodular) idiopatic adrenal cortex hyperplasia (BAH). The "classic" hypokalemic variant occurs more frequently in the case of APA, whereas the normokalemic form is mostly observed in BAH forms. Case finding: PA screening is required in patients with refractory hypertension, younger patients with hypertension, patients with arterial hypertension and hypokalemia, patients with arterial hypertension and obstractive sleep apnoe syndrome, and patients with arterial hypertension and adrenal incidentaloma. Screening is performed using the sensitive, but not very specific, aldosterone to renin ratio (ARR). Subtype differentiation is carried out by means of CT imaging of the adrenal glands in combination with, as a gold standard, adrenal vein catheterization to differentiate between unilateral and bilateral aldosterone production. In the case of a technically unsuccessful catheterization, nuclear medical procedures (e.g. CXCR4-PET/CT, etomidate-PET) are used in individual cases. Genetics: Most cases of PA are sporadic but inherited patterns of the disease have been reported in the literature. Four forms of familial hyperaldosteronism (FH-I- FH-IV) are currently recognized, and the genetic basis has been clarified in recent years. In FH-I patients, aldosterone excess is produced by a CYP11B1/CYP11B2 fusion gene and it is suppressed by glucocorticoid treatment. FH-II is caused by mutations in the inwardly rectifying chloride channel CLCN2. FH-III is caused by mutations in KCNJ5, a gene coding for an inward rectifier K
Learning points:
After this lecture, you should:
• Know the prevalence and at risk populations of endocrine hypertension
• Know the target population which should be screened for PA
• Be able to apply appropriate tests to diagnose and subtype PA
• Be able to identify familiar forms of PA
• Be able to initiate individualized treatment depending on subtype of PA
Key Words: primary aldosteronism, aldosterone, cortisol, adrenal vein sampling, endocrine hypertension, secondary hypertension