248 research outputs found

    Aldosterone-producing adenoma and other surgically correctable forms of primary aldosteronism

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    Surgically correctable forms of primary aldosteronism are characterized by unilateral aldosterone hypersecretion and renin suppression, associated with varying degrees of hypertension and hypokalemia. Unilateral aldosterone hypersecretion is caused by an aldosterone-producing adenoma (also known as Conn's adenoma and aldosteronoma), primary unilateral adrenal hyperplasia and rare cases of aldosterone-producing adrenocortical carcinoma. In these forms, unilateral adrenalectomy can cure aldosterone excess and hypokalemia, but not necessarily hypertension. The prevalence of primary aldosteronism in the general population is not known. Its prevalence in referred hypertensive populations is estimated to be between 6 and 13%, of which 1.5 to 5% have an aldosterone-producing adenoma or primary unilateral adrenal hyperplasia. Taking into account referral biases, the prevalence of surgically correctable primary aldosteronism is probably less than 1.5% in the hypertensive population and less than 0.3% in the general adult population. Surgically correctable primary aldosteronism is sought in patients with hypokalemic, severe or resistant forms of hypertension. Recent recommendations suggest screening for primary aldosteronism using the aldosterone to renin ratio. Patients with a raised ratio then undergo confirmatory suppression tests. The differential diagnosis of hypokalemic hypertension with low renin includes mineralocorticoid excess, with the mineralocorticoid being cortisol or 11-deoxycorticosterone, apparent mineralocorticoid excess, pseudo-hypermineralocorticoidism in Liddle syndrome or exposure to glycyrrhizic acid. Once the diagnosis is confirmed, adrenal computed tomography is performed for all patients. If surgery is considered, taking into consideration the clinical context and the desire of the patient, adrenal vein sampling is performed to detect whether or not aldosterone hypersecretion is unilateral. Laparoscopic surgery for unilateral aldosterone hypersecretion is associated with a morbidity of about 8%, with most complications being minor. It generally results in the normalization of aldosterone secretion and kalemia, and in a large decrease in blood pressure, but normotension without treatment is only achieved in half of all cases. Normotension following adrenalectomy is more frequent in young patients with recent hypertension than in patients with long-standing hypertension or a family history of hypertension

    Consensus hyperaldostéronisme primaire SFE/SFHTA/AFCE, groupe 6: Chirurgie surrénale

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    International audienceTreatment of primary aldosteronism (PA) aims at preventing or correcting hypertension, hypokalemia and target organ damage. Patients with lateralized PA and candidates for surgery may be managed by laparoscopic adrenalectomy. Partial adrenalectomy and non-surgical ablation have no proven advantage over total adrenalectomy. Intraoperative morbidity and mortality are low in reference centers, and day-surgery is warranted in selected cases. Spironolactone administered during the weeks preceding surgery controls hypertension and hypokalemia and may prevent postoperative hypoaldosteronism. In most cases, surgery corrects hypokalemia, improves control of hypertension and reduces the burden of pharmacologic treatment; in about 40% of cases, it resolves hypertension. However, success in controlling hypertension and reversing target organ damage is comparable with mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists. Informed patient preference with regard to surgery is thus an important factor in therapeutic decision-making.Le traitement de l’hyperaldostéronisme primaire vise à prévenir ou corriger l’hypertension, l’hypokaliémie et le retentissement direct sur les organes cibles. Les patients avec une hypersécrétion latéralisée d’aldostérone et candidats à la chirurgie peuvent bénéficier d’une surrénalectomie laparoscopique. La surrénalectomie partielle et les ablations non chirurgicales n’ont pas d’avantage avéré par rapport à la surrénalectomie totale. La morbimortalité peropératoire est faible dans les centres de référence, autorisant la chirurgie ambulatoire dans des cas sélectionnés. L’administration de spironolactone dans les semaines précédant la chirurgie permet de contrôler l’HTA et l’hypokaliémie, et peut-être de prévenir l’hypoaldostéronisme postopératoire. Dans la plupart des cas, la chirurgie corrige l’hypokaliémie, améliore le contrôle de la pression artérielle et diminue la charge des traitements pharmacologiques ; dans environ 40 %, elle guérit l’hypertension. Toutefois, le contrôle de l’hypertension et la réversibilité du retentissement sur les organes cibles sont comparables avec les antagonistes du récepteur des minéralocorticoïdes. Les préférences du patient pour ou contre la chirurgie sont donc un élément important de la décision thérapeutique, après information éclairée

    Identification de nouvelles options thérapeutiques et diagnostiques dans l'hyperaldostéronisme primaire

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    L hyperaldostéronisme primaire [HAP] résulte d une hypersécrétion d aldostérone d origine surrénale. La compréhension de la pathogénie de cette maladie, dont la prévalence est estimée à 10% de la population hypertendue, est essentielle pour le développement de nouveaux outils diagnostiques et thérapeutiques. Dans ce contexte, ce travail de doctorat avait pour but d identifier de nouvelles orientations thérapeutiques en testant un inhibiteur de l aldostérone synthase et de rechercher de nouveaux marqueurs diagnostiques par l étude du profil d expression des microARN [miRs]. Dans une étude de phase II, 14 patients présentant un HAP ont reçu un inhibiteur de l aldostérone synthase : le LCI699 pendant 4 semaines. Nous avons ainsi pu montrer que le LCI699 permet de diminuer les concentrations d aldostérone de 70 à 80% et de normaliser la kaliémie chez tous les patients. En revanche, il n a qu un effet modéré sur la pression artérielle et sur l élévation des concentrations de rénine, et n est que partiellement sélectif pour l aldostérone synthase. De plus son efficacité est moindre que celle de l éplérénone, antagoniste minéralocorticoide administré aux mêmes patients au décours du LCI699. Nous avons ensuite étudié l expression de 754 miRs dans des adénomes produisant de l aldostérone [APA] et dans des surrénales contrôles. L hypothèse était qu une dérégulation de leur expression pouvait être impliquée dans la tumorigénèse et la surproduction d aldostérone. L objectif secondaire était d identifier des miRs utilisables en tant que biomarqueurs. Cette analyse par carte microfluidique a révélé que 27 miRs sont significativement sous exprimés dans les APA et un seul miR est surexprimé. L expression différentielle de deux de ces miRs : miR 137 et miR 375 a pu être confirmée dans une cohorte de validation de 36 APA: Des résultats préliminaires in vitro indiquent que le miR 375 pourrait induire une diminution de la synthèse d aldostérone. Enfin, l analyse de l expression de ces miRs dans le plasma a permis de mettre en évidence une sous-expression du miR 375 chez les patients atteints d HAP en comparaison à des sujets sains. En conclusion, le blocage de la biosynthèse de l aldostérone représente une nouvelle option thérapeutiques, cependant il est nécessaire de développer une seconde génération de molécules : plus puissantes et plus sélectives. Les analyses effectuées sur les APA ouvrent de nouvelles perspectives pour l identification de nouveaux biomarqueurs tels que les miRs circulantsPrimary aldosteronism [PA] results from the hypersecretion of aldosterone by the adrenals. Understanding the pathogenesis of the disease is essential for identifying new diagnostic and therapeutic tools. In this context the purpose of my PHD was to investigate the effects of an aldosterone synthase inhibitor and second to investigate new diagnostic options by the extensive study of microRNA [miRNA]. In a phase II clinical study, 14 patients with PA were administered an aldosterone synthase inhibitor: LCI699. Four weeks of treatment lead to a 70 to 80% decrease in aldosterone concentration, associated with the cure of hypokalemia. However, there was only a mild effect on blood pressure and volemia (reflected by renin concentration). In addition, these results demonstrated an incomplete selectivity of LCI699 for aldosterone synthase in vivo, and showed that LCI699 is less potent than the blocker of the mineralocorticoid receptor: eplerenone . We also characterized the miRNA profile of Aldosterone producing adenomas [APA]. The hypothesis was that a dysregulation of the expression of miRNA could induce tumorigenesis and increase the production of aldosterone. The secondary aim of the study was to identify miRNA that could be measured in plasma as biomarkers. miRNA profiling of 754 miRNA using quantitative PCR Low Density array, revealed 28 miRNA whose expression was significantly different in APA. The differential expression of two miRNA: miRNA 137 and miRNA 375 was confirmed in a validation cohort of 36 APA. Preliminary in vitro studies showed that up-regulation of intracellular levels of miR 375 may reduce aldosterone secretion in H295R cells. Lastly, circulating plasma levels of miR 375 are differentially expressed between patients with PA and healthy volunteers. In conclusion, the blocking of the aldosterone pathway in hypertensive patients is a novel therapeutic option but second-generation drugs more potent and more selective of aldosterone synthase are required. Profiling miRNA in APA offers new prospect for the development of biomarkers, such as measuring circulating miRNA in plasmaPARIS5-Bibliotheque electronique (751069902) / SudocSudocFranceF

    Retinoic acid receptor α as a novel contributor to adrenal cortex structure and function through interactions with Wnt and Vegfa signalling

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    International audiencePrimary aldosteronism (PA) is the most frequent form of secondary arterial hypertension. Mutations in different genes increase aldosterone production in PA, but additional mechanisms may contribute to increased cell proliferation and aldosterone producing adenoma (APA) development. We performed transcriptome analysis in APA and identified retinoic acid receptor alpha (RARα) signaling as a central molecular network involved in nodule formation. To understand how RARα modulates adrenal structure and function, we explored the adrenal phenotype of male and female Rarα knockout mice. inactivation of Rarα in mice led to significant structural disorganization of the adrenal cortex in both sexes, with increased adrenal cortex size in female mice and increased cell proliferation in males. Abnormalities of vessel architecture and extracellular matrix were due to decreased Vegfa expression and modifications in extracellular matrix components. On the molecular level, Rarα inactivation leads to inhibition of non-canonical Wnt signaling, without affecting the canonical Wnt pathway nor PKA signaling. Our study suggests that Rarα contributes to the maintenance of normal adrenal cortex structure and cell proliferation, by modulating Wnt signaling. Dysregulation of this interaction may contribute to abnormal cell proliferation, creating a propitious environment for the emergence of specific driver mutations in PA. Primary aldosteronism (PA) is the most common and curable form of secondary arterial hypertension, with prevalence estimations of up to 10% of cases in referred hypertensive patients, 4% of patients in primary care 1,2 and 20% of patients with resistant hypertension 3,4. Rapid diagnosis and treatment are important to prevent severe cardiovas-cular consequences of long term aldosterone exposure, which are independent of blood pressure levels and are du

    In Vivo Detection of Succinate by Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy as a Hallmark of SDHx Mutations in Paraganglioma

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    International audiencePurpose: Germline mutations in genes encoding mitochon-drial succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) are found in patients with paragangliomas, pheochromocytomas, gastrointestinal stromal tumors, and renal cancers. SDH inactivation leads to a massive accumulation of succinate, acting as an oncometabolite and which levels, assessed on surgically resected tissue are a highly specific biomarker of SDHx-mutated tumors. The aim of this study was to address the feasibility of detecting succinate in vivo by magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Experimental Design: A pulsed proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1 H-MRS) sequence was developed, optimized, and applied to image nude mice grafted with Sdhb À/À or wild-type chromaffin cells. The method was then applied to patients with paraganglioma carrying (n ¼ 5) or not (n ¼ 4) an SDHx gene mutation. Following surgery, succinate was measured using gas chromatography/mass spectrometry, and SDH protein expression was assessed by immunohistochemistry in resected tumors. Results: A succinate peak was observed at 2.44 ppm by 1 H-MRS in all Sdhb À/À-derived tumors in mice and in all paragangliomas of patients carrying an SDHx gene mutation, but neither in wild-type mouse tumors nor in patients exempt of SDHx mutation. In one patient, 1 H-MRS results led to the identification of an unsus-pected SDHA gene mutation. In another case, it helped define the pathogenicity of a variant of unknown significance in the SDHB gene. Conclusions: Detection of succinate by 1 H-MRS is a highly specific and sensitive hallmark of SDHx mutations. This non-invasive approach is a simple and robust method allowing in vivo detection of the major biomarker of SDHx-mutated tumors. Clin Cancer Res; 22(5); 1120–9. Ó2015 AACR

    Identification of glucocorticoid-related molecular signature by whole blood methylome analysis

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    Objective Cushing's syndrome represents a state of excessive glucocorticoids related to glucocorticoid treatments or to endogenous hypercortisolism. Cushing's syndrome is associated with high morbidity, with significant inter-individual variability. Likewise, adrenal insufficiency is a life-threatening condition of cortisol deprivation. Currently, hormone assays contribute to identify Cushing's syndrome or adrenal insufficiency. However, no biomarker directly quantifies the biological glucocorticoid action. The aim of this study was to identify such markers. Design We evaluated whole blood DNA methylome in 94 samples obtained from patients with different glucocorticoid states (Cushing's syndrome, eucortisolism, adrenal insufficiency). We used an independent cohort of 91 samples for validation. Methods Leukocyte DNA was obtained from whole blood samples. Methylome was determined using the Illumina methylation chip array (~850 000 CpG sites). Both unsupervised (principal component analysis) and supervised (Limma) methods were used to explore methylome profiles. A Lasso-penalized regression was used to select optimal discriminating features. Results Whole blood methylation profile was able to discriminate samples by their glucocorticoid status: glucocorticoid excess was associated with DNA hypomethylation, recovering within months after Cushing's syndrome correction. In Cushing's syndrome, an enrichment in hypomethylated CpG sites was observed in the region of FKBP5 gene locus. A methylation predictor of glucocorticoid excess was built on a training cohort and validated on two independent cohorts. Potential CpG sites associated with the risk for specific complications, such as glucocorticoid-related hypertension or osteoporosis, were identified, needing now to be confirmed on independent cohorts. Conclusions Whole blood DNA methylome is dynamically impacted by glucocorticoids. This biomarker could contribute to better assessment of glucocorticoid action beyond hormone assays

    Targeted metabolomics as a tool in discriminating endocrine from primary hypertension

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    Context Identification of patients with endocrine forms of hypertension (EHT) (primary hyperaldosteronism [PA], pheochromocytoma/paraganglioma [PPGL], and Cushing syndrome [CS]) provides the basis to implement individualized therapeutic strategies. Targeted metabolomics (TM) have revealed promising results in profiling cardiovascular diseases and endocrine conditions associated with hypertension. Objective Use TM to identify distinct metabolic patterns between primary hypertension (PHT) and EHT and test its discriminating ability. Methods Retrospective analyses of PHT and EHT patients from a European multicenter study (ENSAT-HT). TM was performed on stored blood samples using liquid chromatography mass spectrometry. To identify discriminating metabolites a “classical approach” (CA) (performing a series of univariate and multivariate analyses) and a “machine learning approach” (MLA) (using random forest) were used. The study included 282 adult patients (52% female; mean age 49 years) with proven PHT (n = 59) and EHT (n = 223 with 40 CS, 107 PA, and 76 PPGL), respectively. Results From 155 metabolites eligible for statistical analyses, 31 were identified discriminating between PHT and EHT using the CA and 27 using the MLA, of which 16 metabolites (C9, C16, C16:1, C18:1, C18:2, arginine, aspartate, glutamate, ornithine, spermidine, lysoPCaC16:0, lysoPCaC20:4, lysoPCaC24:0, PCaeC42:0, SM C18:1, SM C20:2) were found by both approaches. The receiver operating characteristic curve built on the top 15 metabolites from the CA provided an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.86, which was similar to the performance of the 15 metabolites from MLA (AUC 0.83). Conclusion TM identifies distinct metabolic pattern between PHT and EHT providing promising discriminating performance

    The Warburg Effect Is Genetically Determined in Inherited Pheochromocytomas

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    The Warburg effect describes how cancer cells down-regulate their aerobic respiration and preferentially use glycolysis to generate energy. To evaluate the link between hypoxia and Warburg effect, we studied mitochondrial electron transport, angiogenesis and glycolysis in pheochromocytomas induced by germ-line mutations in VHL, RET, NF1 and SDH genes. SDH and VHL gene mutations have been shown to lead to the activation of hypoxic response, even in normoxic conditions, a process now referred to as pseudohypoxia. We observed a decrease in electron transport protein expression and activity, associated with increased angiogenesis in SDH- and VHL-related, pseudohypoxic tumors, while stimulation of glycolysis was solely observed in VHL tumors. Moreover, microarray analyses revealed that expression of genes involved in these metabolic pathways is an efficient tool for classification of pheochromocytomas in accordance with the predisposition gene mutated. Our data suggest an unexpected association between pseudohypoxia and loss of p53, which leads to a distinct Warburg effect in VHL-related pheochromocytomas

    Whole blood methylome-derived features to discriminate endocrine hypertension

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    Background: Arterial hypertension represents a worldwide health burden and a major risk factor for cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Hypertension can be primary (primary hypertension, PHT), or secondary to endocrine disorders (endocrine hypertension, EHT), such as Cushing's syndrome (CS), primary aldosteronism (PA), and pheochromocytoma/paraganglioma (PPGL). Diagnosis of EHT is currently based on hormone assays. Efficient detection remains challenging, but is crucial to properly orientate patients for diagnostic confirmation and specific treatment. More accurate biomarkers would help in the diagnostic pathway. We hypothesized that each type of endocrine hypertension could be associated with a specific blood DNA methylation signature, which could be used for disease discrimination. To identify such markers, we aimed at exploring the methylome profiles in a cohort of 255 patients with hypertension, either PHT (n = 42) or EHT (n = 213), and at identifying specific discriminating signatures using machine learning approaches. Results: Unsupervised classification of samples showed discrimination of PHT from EHT. CS patients clustered separately from all other patients, whereas PA and PPGL showed an overall overlap. Global methylation was decreased in the CS group compared to PHT. Supervised comparison with PHT identified differentially methylated CpG sites for each type of endocrine hypertension, showing a diffuse genomic location. Among the most differentially methylated genes, FKBP5 was identified in the CS group. Using four different machine learning methods—Lasso (Least Absolute Shrinkage and Selection Operator), Logistic Regression, Random Forest, and Support Vector Machine—predictive models for each type of endocrine hypertension were built on training cohorts (80% of samples for each hypertension type) and estimated on validation cohorts (20% of samples for each hypertension type). Balanced accuracies ranged from 0.55 to 0.74 for predicting EHT, 0.85 to 0.95 for predicting CS, 0.66 to 0.88 for predicting PA, and 0.70 to 0.83 for predicting PPGL. Conclusions: The blood DNA methylome can discriminate endocrine hypertension, with methylation signatures for each type of endocrine disorder
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