[11C]metomidate PET-CT versus adrenal vein sampling for diagnosing surgically curable primary aldosteronism: a prospective, within-patient trial

Xilin Wu(St Bartholomew's Hospital), Russell Senanayake(University of Cambridge), Emily Goodchild(St Bartholomew's Hospital), Waiel Bashari(University of Cambridge), Jackie Salsbury(Queen Mary University of London), Claudia Cabrera(Queen Mary University of London), Giulia Argentesi(St Bartholomew's Hospital), Samuel O’Toole(Queen Mary University of London), Matthew Matson(St Bartholomew's Hospital), Brendan Koo(Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Laila Parvanta(St Bartholomew's Hospital), Nick Hilliard(Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Vasilis Kosmoliaptsis(Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Alison Marker(Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Daniel M. Berney(St Bartholomew's Hospital), Wilson Tan(National University of Singapore), Roger Foo(National University of Singapore), Charles A. Mein(Queen Mary University of London), Eva Wozniak(Queen Mary University of London), Emmanuel Savage(Queen Mary University of London), Anju Sahdev(St Bartholomew's Hospital), Nicholas J. Bird(Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Kate Laycock(St Bartholomew's Hospital), István Boros(University of Cambridge), Stefan Hader(University of Cambridge), Victoria Warnes(Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Daniel Gillett(Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Anne Dawnay(St Bartholomew's Hospital), Elizabeth Adeyeye(Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust), Alessandro Prete(University of Birmingham), Angela E. Taylor(University of Birmingham), Wiebke Arlt(University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust), Anish Bhuva(St Bartholomew's Hospital), Franklin I. Aigbirhio(University of Cambridge), Charlotte Manisty(St Bartholomew's Hospital), Alasdair McIntosh(University of Glasgow), Alex McConnachie(University of Glasgow), J.K. Cruickshank(King's College London), Heok Cheow(Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Mark Gurnell(Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), William M Drake(St Bartholomew's Hospital), Morris J. Brown(St Bartholomew's Hospital)
Nature Medicine
January 1, 2023
Cited by 135Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Primary aldosteronism (PA) due to a unilateral aldosterone-producing adenoma is a common cause of hypertension. This can be cured, or greatly improved, by adrenal surgery. However, the invasive nature of the standard pre-surgical investigation contributes to fewer than 1% of patients with PA being offered the chance of a cure. The primary objective of our prospective study of 143 patients with PA ( NCT02945904 ) was to compare the accuracy of a non-invasive test, [ 11 C]metomidate positron emission tomography computed tomography (MTO) scanning, with adrenal vein sampling (AVS) in predicting the biochemical remission of PA and the resolution of hypertension after surgery. A total of 128 patients reached 6- to 9-month follow-up, with 78 (61%) treated surgically and 50 (39%) managed medically. Of the 78 patients receiving surgery, 77 achieved one or more PA surgical outcome criterion for success. The accuracies of MTO at predicting biochemical and clinical success following adrenalectomy were, respectively, 72.7 and 65.4%. For AVS, the accuracies were 63.6 and 61.5%. MTO was not significantly superior, but the differences of 9.1% (95% confidence interval = −6.5 to 24.1%) and 3.8% (95% confidence interval = −11.9 to 9.4) lay within the pre-specified −17% margin for non-inferiority ( P = 0.00055 and P = 0.0077, respectively). Of 24 serious adverse events, none was considered related to either investigation and 22 were fully resolved. MTO enables non-invasive diagnosis of unilateral PA.


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