Scientific Reports (Dec 2023)

Identifying primary aldosteronism patients who require adrenal venous sampling: a multi-center study

  • Takumi Kitamoto,
  • Tsuyoshi Idé,
  • Yuta Tezuka,
  • Norio Wada,
  • Yui Shibayama,
  • Yuya Tsurutani,
  • Tomoko Takiguchi,
  • Kosuke Inoue,
  • Sachiko Suematsu,
  • Kei Omata,
  • Yoshikiyo Ono,
  • Ryo Morimoto,
  • Yuto Yamazaki,
  • Jun Saito,
  • Hironobu Sasano,
  • Fumitoshi Satoh,
  • Tetsuo Nishikawa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-47967-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Adrenal venous sampling (AVS) is crucial for subtyping primary aldosteronism (PA) to explore the possibility of curing hypertension. Because AVS availability is limited, efforts have been made to develop strategies to bypass it. However, it has so far proven unsuccessful in applying clinical practice, partly due to heterogeneity and missing values of the cohorts. For this purpose, we retrospectively assessed 210 PA cases from three institutions where segment-selective AVS, which is more accurate and sensitive for detecting PA cases with surgical indications, was available. A machine learning-based classification model featuring a new cross-center domain adaptation capability was developed. The model identified 102 patients with PA who benefited from surgery in the present cohort. A new data imputation technique was used to address cross-center heterogeneity, making a common prediction model applicable across multiple cohorts. Logistic regression demonstrated higher accuracy than Random Forest and Deep Learning [(0.89, 0.86) vs. (0.84, 0.84), (0.82, 0.84) for surgical or medical indications in terms of f-score]. A derived integrated flowchart revealed that 35.2% of PA cases required AVS with 94.1% accuracy. The present model enabled us to reduce the burden of AVS on patients who would benefit the most.