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Use of plasma metanephrine to aid adrenal venous sampling in combined aldosterone and cortisol over-secretion

In patients with primary aldosteronism (PA) undergoing adrenal venous sampling (AVS), cortisol levels are measured to assess lateralization of aldosterone overproduction. Concomitant adrenal autonomous cortisol and aldosterone secretion therefore have the potential to confound AVS results. We descri...

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Autores principales: Goupil, Rémi, Wolley, Martin, Ungerer, Jacobus, McWhinney, Brett, Mukai, Kuniaki, Naruse, Mitsuhide, Gordon, Richard D, Stowasser, Michael
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Bioscientifica Ltd 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4637894/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26557366
http://dx.doi.org/10.1530/EDM-15-0075
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author Goupil, Rémi
Wolley, Martin
Ungerer, Jacobus
McWhinney, Brett
Mukai, Kuniaki
Naruse, Mitsuhide
Gordon, Richard D
Stowasser, Michael
author_facet Goupil, Rémi
Wolley, Martin
Ungerer, Jacobus
McWhinney, Brett
Mukai, Kuniaki
Naruse, Mitsuhide
Gordon, Richard D
Stowasser, Michael
author_sort Goupil, Rémi
collection PubMed
description In patients with primary aldosteronism (PA) undergoing adrenal venous sampling (AVS), cortisol levels are measured to assess lateralization of aldosterone overproduction. Concomitant adrenal autonomous cortisol and aldosterone secretion therefore have the potential to confound AVS results. We describe a case where metanephrine was measured during AVS to successfully circumvent this problem. A 55-year-old hypertensive male had raised plasma aldosterone/renin ratios and PA confirmed by fludrocortisone suppression testing. Failure of plasma cortisol to suppress overnight following dexamethasone and persistently suppressed corticotrophin were consistent with adrenal hypercortisolism. On AVS, comparison of adrenal and peripheral A/F ratios (left 5.7 vs peripheral 1.0; right 1.7 vs peripheral 1.1) suggested bilateral aldosterone production, with the left gland dominant but without contralateral suppression. However, using aldosterone/metanephrine ratios (left 9.7 vs peripheral 2.4; right 1.3 vs peripheral 2.5), aldosterone production lateralized to the left with good contralateral suppression. The patient underwent left laparoscopic adrenalectomy with peri-operative glucocorticoid supplementation to prevent adrenal insufficiency. Pathological examination revealed adrenal cortical adenomas producing both cortisol and aldosterone within a background of aldosterone-producing cell clusters. Hypertension improved and cured of PA and hypercortisolism were confirmed by negative post-operative fludrocortisone suppression and overnight 1 mg dexamethasone suppression testing. Routine dexamethasone suppression testing in patients with PA permits detection of concurrent hypercortisolism which can confound AVS results and cause unilateral PA to be misdiagnosed as bilateral with patients thereby denied potentially curative surgical treatment. In such patients, measurement of plasma metanephrine during AVS may overcome this issue. LEARNING POINTS: Simultaneous autonomous overproduction of cortisol and aldosterone is increasingly recognised although still apparently uncommon. Because cortisol levels are used during AVS to correct for differences in dilution of adrenal with non-adrenal venous blood when assessing for lateralisation, unilateral cortisol overproduction with contralateral suppression could confound the interpretation of AVS results. Measuring plasma metanephrine during AVS to calculate lateralisation ratios may circumvent this problem.
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spelling pubmed-46378942015-11-09 Use of plasma metanephrine to aid adrenal venous sampling in combined aldosterone and cortisol over-secretion Goupil, Rémi Wolley, Martin Ungerer, Jacobus McWhinney, Brett Mukai, Kuniaki Naruse, Mitsuhide Gordon, Richard D Stowasser, Michael Endocrinol Diabetes Metab Case Rep Novel Diagnostic Procedure In patients with primary aldosteronism (PA) undergoing adrenal venous sampling (AVS), cortisol levels are measured to assess lateralization of aldosterone overproduction. Concomitant adrenal autonomous cortisol and aldosterone secretion therefore have the potential to confound AVS results. We describe a case where metanephrine was measured during AVS to successfully circumvent this problem. A 55-year-old hypertensive male had raised plasma aldosterone/renin ratios and PA confirmed by fludrocortisone suppression testing. Failure of plasma cortisol to suppress overnight following dexamethasone and persistently suppressed corticotrophin were consistent with adrenal hypercortisolism. On AVS, comparison of adrenal and peripheral A/F ratios (left 5.7 vs peripheral 1.0; right 1.7 vs peripheral 1.1) suggested bilateral aldosterone production, with the left gland dominant but without contralateral suppression. However, using aldosterone/metanephrine ratios (left 9.7 vs peripheral 2.4; right 1.3 vs peripheral 2.5), aldosterone production lateralized to the left with good contralateral suppression. The patient underwent left laparoscopic adrenalectomy with peri-operative glucocorticoid supplementation to prevent adrenal insufficiency. Pathological examination revealed adrenal cortical adenomas producing both cortisol and aldosterone within a background of aldosterone-producing cell clusters. Hypertension improved and cured of PA and hypercortisolism were confirmed by negative post-operative fludrocortisone suppression and overnight 1 mg dexamethasone suppression testing. Routine dexamethasone suppression testing in patients with PA permits detection of concurrent hypercortisolism which can confound AVS results and cause unilateral PA to be misdiagnosed as bilateral with patients thereby denied potentially curative surgical treatment. In such patients, measurement of plasma metanephrine during AVS may overcome this issue. LEARNING POINTS: Simultaneous autonomous overproduction of cortisol and aldosterone is increasingly recognised although still apparently uncommon. Because cortisol levels are used during AVS to correct for differences in dilution of adrenal with non-adrenal venous blood when assessing for lateralisation, unilateral cortisol overproduction with contralateral suppression could confound the interpretation of AVS results. Measuring plasma metanephrine during AVS to calculate lateralisation ratios may circumvent this problem. Bioscientifica Ltd 2015-10-13 2015 /pmc/articles/PMC4637894/ /pubmed/26557366 http://dx.doi.org/10.1530/EDM-15-0075 Text en © 2015 The authors This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/deed.en_GB) .
spellingShingle Novel Diagnostic Procedure
Goupil, Rémi
Wolley, Martin
Ungerer, Jacobus
McWhinney, Brett
Mukai, Kuniaki
Naruse, Mitsuhide
Gordon, Richard D
Stowasser, Michael
Use of plasma metanephrine to aid adrenal venous sampling in combined aldosterone and cortisol over-secretion
title Use of plasma metanephrine to aid adrenal venous sampling in combined aldosterone and cortisol over-secretion
title_full Use of plasma metanephrine to aid adrenal venous sampling in combined aldosterone and cortisol over-secretion
title_fullStr Use of plasma metanephrine to aid adrenal venous sampling in combined aldosterone and cortisol over-secretion
title_full_unstemmed Use of plasma metanephrine to aid adrenal venous sampling in combined aldosterone and cortisol over-secretion
title_short Use of plasma metanephrine to aid adrenal venous sampling in combined aldosterone and cortisol over-secretion
title_sort use of plasma metanephrine to aid adrenal venous sampling in combined aldosterone and cortisol over-secretion
topic Novel Diagnostic Procedure
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4637894/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26557366
http://dx.doi.org/10.1530/EDM-15-0075
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