11 research outputs found

    Outcomes of Drug-Based and Surgical Treatments for Primary Aldosteronism

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    International audienceTreatments for primary aldosteronism (PA) aim to correct or prevent the deleterious consequences of hyperaldosteronism: hypertension, hypokalemia, and direct target organ damage. Patients with unilateral PA considered fit for surgery can undergo laparoscopic adrenalectomy, which significantly decreases blood pressure (BP) and medications in most cases and cures hypertension in about 40%. Mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists (MRA) are used to treat patients with bilateral PA and those with unilateral PA if surgery is not possible or not desired. Spironolactone is more potent than eplerenone, but high doses are poorly tolerated in men. MRA can be replaced or complemented with epithelial sodium channel blockers, such as amiloride. Thiazide diuretics and calcium channel blockers are used when the first-line drugs are insufficient to control BP. Dietary sodium restriction should be implemented in all cases because the deleterious consequences of hyperaldosteronism are dependent on salt loading. Several studies comparing the results of surgery and MRA have reported no differences in terms of BP, serum potassium concentration, or cardiovascular and kidney outcomes, although the benefits of treatment tend to be observed sooner with surgery. Patients with PA display relative glomerular hyperfiltration, which is reversed by specific treatment, revealing CKD in 30% of patients. However, further kidney damage is lessened by the treatment of PA

    Adrenal adaptation in potassium-depleted men: role of progesterone?

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    International audienceBACKGROUND:In rodents, the stimulation of adrenal progesterone is necessary for renal adaptation under potassium depletion. Here, we sought to determine the role of progesterone in adrenal adaptation in potassium-depleted healthy human volunteers and compared our findings with data collected in patients with Gitelman syndrome (GS), a salt-losing tubulopathy.METHODS:Twelve healthy young men were given a potassium-depleted diet for 7 days at a tertiary referral medical centre (NCT02297048). We measured by liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectroscopy plasma steroid concentrations at Days 0 and 7 before and 30 min after treatment with tetracosactide. We compared these data with data collected in 10 GS patients submitted to tetracosactide test.RESULTS:The potassium-depleted diet decreased plasma potassium in healthy subjects by 0.3 ± 0.1 mmol/L, decreased plasma aldosterone concentration by 50% (P = 0.0332) and increased plasma 17-hydroxypregnenolone concentration by 45% (P = 0.0232) without affecting other steroids. CYP17 activity, as assessed by 17-hydroxypregnenolone/pregnenolone ratio, increased by 60% (P = 0.0389). As compared with healthy subjects, GS patients had 3-fold higher plasma concentrations of aldosterone, 11-deoxycortisol (+30%) and delta 4-androstenedione (+14%). Their post-tetracosactide progesterone concentration was 2-fold higher than that of healthy subjects and better correlated to plasma potassium than to plasma renin.CONCLUSION:The increase in 17-hydroxypregnenolone concentration after mild potassium depletion in otherwise healthy human subjects suggests that 17 hydroxylation of pregnenolone prevents the increase in progesterone observed in potassium-depleted mice. The unexpected over-response of non-mineralocorticoid steroids to tetracosactide in GS subjects suggests that the adrenal system not only adapts to sodium depletion but may also respond to hypokalaemia

    Aldosterone-Related Myocardial Extracellular Matrix Expansion in Hypertension in Humans A Proof-of-Concept Study by Cardiac Magnetic Resonance

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    International audienceObjectives: This study sought to assess the respective effects of aldosterone and blood pressure (BP) levels on myocardial fibrosis in humans.Background: Experimentally, aldosterone promotes left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy, and interstitial myocardial fibrosis in the presence of high salt intake.Methods: The study included 20 patients with primary aldosteronism (PA) (high aldosterone and high BP), 20 patients with essential hypertension (HTN) (average aldosterone and high BP), 20 patients with secondary aldosteronism due to Bartter/Gitelman (BG) syndrome (high aldosterone and normal BP), and 20 healthy subjects (HS) (normal aldosterone and normal BP). Participants in each group were of similar age and sex distributions, and asymptomatic. Cardiac magnetic resonance including cine and T1 mapping was performed blind to the study group to quantify global LV mass index, as well as intracellular mass index and extracellular mass index considered as a measure of myocardial fibrosis in vivo.Results: Median plasma aldosterone concentration was as follows: PA = 709 pmol/l (interquartile range [IQR]: 430 to 918 pmol/l); HTN = 197 pmol/l (IQR: 121 to 345 pmol/l); BG = 297 pmol/l (IQR: 180 to 428 pmol/l); and HS = 105 pmol/l (IQR: 85 to 227 pmol/l). Systolic BP was as follows: PA = 147 ± 15 mm Hg; HTN = 133 ± 19 mm Hg; BG = 116 ± 9 mm Hg; and HS = 117 ± 12 mm Hg. LV end-diastolic volume showed underloading in BG and overloading in patients with PA (63 ± 13 ml/m2 vs. 82 ± 15 ml/m2; p < 0.0001). Intracellular mass index increased with BP across groups (BG: 36 [IQR: 29 to 41]; HS: 40 [IQR: 36 to 46]; HTN: 51 [IQR: 42 to 54]; PA: 50 [IQR: 46 to 67]; p < 0.0001). Extracellular mass index was similar in BG, HS, and HTN (16 [IQR: 12 to 20]; 15 [IQR: 11 to 18]; and 14 [IQR: 12 to 17], respectively) but 30% higher in PA (21 [IQR: 18 to 29]; p < 0.0001) remaining significant after adjustment for mean BP.Conclusions: Only primary pathological aldosterone excess combined with high BP increased both extracellular myocardial matrix and intracellular mass. Secondary aldosterone excess with normal BP did not affect extracellular myocardial matrix. (Study of Myocardial Interstitial Fibrosis in Hyperaldosteronism; NCT02938910)

    Genetic investigation of fibromuscular dysplasia identifies risk loci and shared genetics with common cardiovascular diseases

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    International audienceFibromuscular dysplasia (FMD) is an arteriopathy associated with hypertension, stroke and myocardial infarction, affecting mostly women. We report results from the first genome-wide association meta-analysis of six studies including 1556 FMD cases and 7100 controls. We find an estimate of SNP-based heritability compatible with FMD having a polygenic basis, and report four robustly associated loci (PHACTR1, LRP1, ATP2B1, and LIMA1). Transcriptome-wide association analysis in arteries identifies one additional locus (SLC24A3). We characterize open chromatin in arterial primary cells and find that FMD associated variants are located in arterial-specific regulatory elements. Target genes are broadly involved in mechanisms related to actin cytoskeleton and intracellular calcium homeostasis, central to vascular contraction. We find significant genetic overlap between FMD and more common cardiovascular diseases and traits including blood pressure, migraine, intracranial aneurysm, and coronary artery disease

    Low incidence of SARS-CoV-2, risk factors of mortality and the course of illness in the French national cohort of dialysis patients

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    International audienceThe aim of this study was to estimate the incidence of COVID-19 disease in the French national population of dialysis patients, their course of illness and to identify the risk factors associated with mortality. Our study included all patients on dialysis recorded in the French REIN Registry in April 2020. Clinical characteristics at last follow-up and the evolution of COVID-19 illness severity over time were recorded for diagnosed cases (either suspicious clinical symptoms, characteristic signs on the chest scan or a positive reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction) for SARS-CoV-2. A total of 1,621 infected patients were reported on the REIN registry from March 16th, 2020 to May 4th, 2020. Of these, 344 died. The prevalence of COVID-19 patients varied from less than 1% to 10% between regions. The probability of being a case was higher in males, patients with diabetes, those in need of assistance for transfer or treated at a self-care unit. Dialysis at home was associated with a lower probability of being infected as was being a smoker, a former smoker, having an active malignancy, or peripheral vascular disease. Mortality in diagnosed cases (21%) was associated with the same causes as in the general population. Higher age, hypoalbuminemia and the presence of an ischemic heart disease were statistically independently associated with a higher risk of death. Being treated at a selfcare unit was associated with a lower risk. Thus, our study showed a relatively low frequency of COVID-19 among dialysis patients contrary to what might have been assumed
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