PURPOSE: The current clinical investigation for primary aldosteronism (PA) diagnosis requires complex expensive tests from the initial suspicion to the final subtype classification, including invasive approaches; therefore, appropriate markers for subtype definition are greatly desirable. The present study performs a metabolomics analysis to further examine specific molecular signatures of PA urines EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: The study considered PA subtype and gender-related differences using two orthogonal advanced UHPLC-MS metabolomics approaches. Patients with essential hypertension (n = 36) and PA (n = 50) who were referred to the outpatient hypertension clinic and matched healthy subjects (n = 10) are investigated. RESULTS: Statistically significant changes (p < 0.05 ANOVA, Fc > 1.5) of metabolites involved in central carbon, energy, and nitrogen metabolism are identified, especially purine and pyrimidine nucleosides and precursors, and free amino acids. PLS-DA interpretation provides strong evidence of a disease-specific metabolic pattern with dAMP, diiodothyronine, and 5-methoxytryptophan as leading factors, and a sex-specific metabolic pattern associated with orotidine 5-phosphate, N-acetylalanine, hydroxyproline, and cysteine. The results are verified using an independent sample set, which confirms the identification of specific signatures. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Metabolomics is used to identify low molecular weight molecular markers of PA, which paves the way for follow-up validation studies in larger cohorts.

Urinary Metabolic Signature of Primary Aldosteronism: Gender and Subtype-Specific Alterations

Mulatero P.;
2019-01-01

Abstract

PURPOSE: The current clinical investigation for primary aldosteronism (PA) diagnosis requires complex expensive tests from the initial suspicion to the final subtype classification, including invasive approaches; therefore, appropriate markers for subtype definition are greatly desirable. The present study performs a metabolomics analysis to further examine specific molecular signatures of PA urines EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: The study considered PA subtype and gender-related differences using two orthogonal advanced UHPLC-MS metabolomics approaches. Patients with essential hypertension (n = 36) and PA (n = 50) who were referred to the outpatient hypertension clinic and matched healthy subjects (n = 10) are investigated. RESULTS: Statistically significant changes (p < 0.05 ANOVA, Fc > 1.5) of metabolites involved in central carbon, energy, and nitrogen metabolism are identified, especially purine and pyrimidine nucleosides and precursors, and free amino acids. PLS-DA interpretation provides strong evidence of a disease-specific metabolic pattern with dAMP, diiodothyronine, and 5-methoxytryptophan as leading factors, and a sex-specific metabolic pattern associated with orotidine 5-phosphate, N-acetylalanine, hydroxyproline, and cysteine. The results are verified using an independent sample set, which confirms the identification of specific signatures. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Metabolomics is used to identify low molecular weight molecular markers of PA, which paves the way for follow-up validation studies in larger cohorts.
2019
13
4
1
10
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1002/(ISSN)1862-8354
aldosterone-producing adenoma; aldosterone-to-renin ratio; hypertension; primary aldosteronism; urinary metabolomics
Lana A.; Alexander K.; Castagna A.; D'Alessandro A.; Morandini F.; Pizzolo F.; Zorzi F.; Mulatero P.; Zolla L.; Olivieri O.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2318/1716949
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