Therapeutic Advances in Chronic Disease (Aug 2020)

Transtubular potassium gradient predicts kidney function impairment after adrenalectomy in primary aldosteronism

  • Hung-Wei Liao,
  • Shuo-Meng Wang,
  • Chieh-Kai Chan,
  • Yen-Hung Lin,
  • Po-Chih Lin,
  • Chen-Hsun Ho,
  • Yu-Chun Liu,
  • Jeff S Chueh,
  • Vin-Cent Wu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/2040622320944792
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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Background: In primary aldosteronism (PA), kidney function impairment could be concealed by relative hyperfiltration and emerge after adrenalectomy. We hypothesized transtubular gradient potassium gradient (TTKG), a kidney aldosterone bioactivity indicator, could correlate to end organ damage and forecast kidney function impairment after adrenalectomy. Methods: In the present prospective study, we enrolled lateralized PA patients who underwent adrenalectomy and were followed up 12 months after operation in the Taiwan Primary Aldosteronism Investigation (TAIPAI) registry from 2010 to 2018. The clinical outcome was kidney function impairment, defined as estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) 50 mg/g [odds ratio (OR) = 2.42; p = 0.034] and left ventricular mass (B = 20.10; p = 0.018). Multivariate logistic regression analysis demonstrated that TTKG ⩾ 4.9 could predict concealed chronic kidney disease (OR = 5.42; p = 0.011) and clinical success (OR = 2.90, p = 0.017) at 12 months after adrenalectomy. Conclusions: TTKG could predict concealed kidney function impairment and cure of hypertension in PA patients after adrenalectomy. TTKG more than 4.9 as an adverse surrogate of aldosterone and hypokalaemia correlated with pre-operative end organ damage in terms of high proteinuria and cardiac hypertrophy.