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Prospective Cross-sectional Study on Prevalence of Primary Aldosteronism in Resistant Hypertension and Association With Cardiometabolic Complications
Prevalence of primary aldosteronism (PA) in resistant hypertension is not clear. In addition, emerging evidence supports the role of elevated serum aldosterone in promoting cardiovascular disease, independently from high blood pressure (BP) levels, but current data on this issue are heterogeneous.
PA is the most frequent form of secondary hypertension, with a prevalence that increases with the severity of hypertension. The wide variation of the reported PA prevalence is due to different study design and population. Very few data derive from well designed prospective study. Additional problems in the interpretation of study results are the different diagnostic cut-off used in various centers and the low diffusion of the adrenal vein sampling, that has a central role in the PA diagnosis. Resistant hypertension (RH) is a condition of insufficient BP control, despite appropriate lifestyle measures and treatment with at least 3 drugs at full dose, including a diuretic, in patients whose adherence to therapy has been confirmed. The primary aim of our study is define prospectively the prevalence of PA in RH. Moreover, emerging evidence supports the crucial role of elevated serum aldosterone in promoting cardiovascular disease, independently from high BP levels. Aldosterone improves oxidative stress, inflammation, impairs insulin metabolic signaling, reduced endothelial-mediated vasorelaxation and is associated to cardiovascular and renal abnormalities. However, current data on the contribution of PA on cardiometabolic complications have heterogeneous results. The secondary outcome of our study is to investigate prospectively the association of PA with cardiometabolic complications in a cohort of patients with RH.
Age
18 - 80 years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No
Division of Endocrinology, Diabetology and Metabolism; University of Turin
Turin, Piedmont, Italy
Start Date
September 1, 2011
Primary Completion Date
September 30, 2020
Completion Date
October 31, 2025
Last Updated
November 3, 2020
100
ESTIMATED participants
Lead Sponsor
University of Turin, Italy
NCT05405101
NCT04388124
Data Source & Attribution
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View ClinicalTrials.gov Terms and ConditionsNCT06833437