All newly-diagnosed hypertensive patients should be screened for primary aldosteronism before they are started on treatment, Australian experts suggest in the latest issue of the MJA.“Primary aldosteronism is common, specifically treatable, and associated with significant cardiovascular morbidity and mortality,” say researchers Dr Jun Yang, Professor Peter Fuller and Professor Michael Stowasser.They refer to a recent systematic review of over 30 studies, that found among a cohort of people with severe or resistant hypertension (systolic BP >180mmHg and diastolic BP >110), 16.4% were found to have primary aldosteronism.Admittedly these studies were carried out in tertiary centres. There been far fewer studies on the issue conducted in primary care with somewhat mixed results, with one small Australian study suggesting 11.5% of people with significant hypertension in the general practice setting had primary aldosteronism.But its not only the patients with severe hypertension that need to be considered for primary aldosteronism screening, the authors suggest.They point to an Italian study including over 1600 GP patients selected randomly who were screened for primary aldosteronism and found a prevalence of 5.9%. Importantly 45% of these had mild hypertension (BP 140-159/90-99mmHg).According to the article authors, these patients, because would have most likely remained undiagnosed if not for the study. And the effect of the untreated aldosterone excess would have most likely led to poor blood pressure control and increased cardiovascular, renal and metabolic morbidity long-term.In other words, identifying these patients early in the course of the disease could allow more appropriate treatment and ultimately avoid the end-organ damage that is more likely to occur if diagnosis is delayed until after the development of severe hypertension.“Targeted treatment of [primary aldosteronism] using surgery or mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists, such as spironolactone and eplerenone, rather than non-specific antihypertensive medications, can reverse the underlying cardiovascular pathology,” they said.The recommended biochemical screening tool for primary aldosteronism is the aldosterone to renin ratio which is elevated in this condition because plasma aldosterone is normal or elevated while renin is suppressed.The experts suggest screening prior to commencing antihypertensive therapy as many of these drugs, including beta blockers, calcium channel blockers, ACE inhibitors, ARBs and diuretics usually interfere with this aldosterone to renin ratio.The test isn’t perfect, they admit, as it can be influenced by a number of confounders including salt intake and age, but as a screening tool it has been proven, in trials both in Australia and internationally to be very useful, resulting in significantly increased numbers of patients diagnosed.Current Australian hypertension guidelines recommend clinicians consider primary aldosteronism in patients with hypertension particularly those with moderate to severe or treatment-resistant hypertension. But, as the article authors point out, given the prevalence of primary aldosteronism and the health burden associated with this cardiovascular risk factor both to the Australian population and the economy, maybe it is time to consider screening all newly-diagnosed hypertensive patients for this condition, before the commencement of non-specific antihypertensive therapy.“This diagnostic strategy should lead to significant individual and population health and economic impacts as a result of many patients with hypertension being offered the chance of curative or simpler treatment at an early stage of their disease.”Ref:MJA doi:10.5694/mja17.00783
Expert/s: Dr Linda Calabresi





