Cross-Disciplinary Approach of Adrenal Tumors: Insights into Primary Aldosteronism-Related Mineral Metabolism Status and Osteoporotic Fracture Risk.

DXA adrenal aldosterone bone bone turnover markers fracture osteoporosis parathormone primary aldosteronism trabecular bone score

Journal

International journal of molecular sciences
ISSN: 1422-0067
Titre abrégé: Int J Mol Sci
Pays: Switzerland
ID NLM: 101092791

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
11 Dec 2023
Historique:
received: 22 10 2023
revised: 28 11 2023
accepted: 30 11 2023
medline: 23 12 2023
pubmed: 23 12 2023
entrez: 23 12 2023
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Our objective was to overview the novel aspects in the field of adrenal gland neoplasms, namely, the management of bone status with respect to primary aldosteronism (PA). In the current narrative review, a PubMed study was conducted from inception until June 2023. The inclusion criteria were: human (clinically relevant) studies of any study design (at least 10 patients per study); English papers; and the following combination of key words within the title and/or abstract: "aldosterone" AND "bone", "skeleton", "osteoporosis", "fracture", "calcium", "parathyroid", "DXA", "osteocalcin", "P1NP", "alkaline phosphatase", "bone marker", "trabecular bone score", or "FRAX". The exclusion criteria were in vitro or animal studies, reviews, and case reports/series. We screened 1027 articles and finally included 23 studies (13 of case-control type, 3 cross-sectional, 5 prospective, 1 observational cohort, and 1 retrospective study). The assessments provided in these studies were as follows: nine studies addressed Dual-Energy X-ray Absorptiometry (DXA), another study pointed out a bone microarchitecture evaluation underlying trabecular bone score (TBS), and seven studies investigated the bone turnover markers (BTMs) profile. Moreover, 14 studies followed the subjects after adrenalectomy versus medical treatment, and 21 studies addressed secondary hyperparathyroidism in PA patients. According to our study on published data during a period of almost 40 years (n = 23, N = 3965 subjects aged between 38 and 64, with a mean age 56.75, and a female-to-male ratio of 1.05), a higher PTH in PA versus controls (healthy persons or subjects with essential hypertension) is expected, secondary hyperparathyroidism being associated in almost half of the adults diagnosed with PA. Additionally, mineral metabolism anomalies in PA may include lower serum calcium and higher urinary calcium output, all these three parameters being reversible under specific therapy for PA, regardless medical or surgical. The PA subgroup with high PTH seems at higher cardiovascular risk, while unilateral rather than bilateral disease was prone to this PTH anomaly. Moreover, bone mineral density (BMD) according to central DXA might show a higher fracture risk only in certain adults, TBS being a promising alternative (with a still unknown perspective of diabetes' influence on DXA-TBS results in PA). However, an overall increased fracture prevalence in PA is described in most studies, especially with respect to the vertebral site, the fracture risk that seems correctable upon aldosterone excess remission. These data recommend PA as a cause of secondary osteoporosis, a treatable one via PA intervention. There is still an area of debate the way to address BMTs profile in PA, the case's selection toward specific bone evaluation in every day practice, and further on, the understanding of the potential genetic influence at the level of bone and mineral complications in PA patients.

Identifiants

pubmed: 38139166
pii: ijms242417338
doi: 10.3390/ijms242417338
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article Review

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Subventions

Organisme : Carol Davila University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Bucharest, Romania; granted via institutional program "Publish not Perish".
ID : 2023

Auteurs

Alexandra-Ioana Trandafir (AI)

PhD Doctoral School, Carol Davila University of Medicine and Pharmacy, 020021 Bucharest, Romania.
Department of Endocrinology, C.I. Parhon National Institute of Endocrinology, 011683 Bucharest, Romania.

Ana-Maria Gheorghe (AM)

PhD Doctoral School, Carol Davila University of Medicine and Pharmacy, 020021 Bucharest, Romania.
Department of Endocrinology, C.I. Parhon National Institute of Endocrinology, 011683 Bucharest, Romania.

Oana-Claudia Sima (OC)

PhD Doctoral School, Carol Davila University of Medicine and Pharmacy, 020021 Bucharest, Romania.
Department of Endocrinology, C.I. Parhon National Institute of Endocrinology, 011683 Bucharest, Romania.

Adrian Ciuche (A)

Department 4-Cardio-Thoracic Pathology, Thoracic Surgery II Discipline, Faculty of Medicine, Carol Davila University of Medicine and Pharmacy, 020021 Bucharest, Romania.
Thoracic Surgery Department, "Dr. Carol Davila" Central Emergency University Military Hospital, 010825 Bucharest, Romania.

Eugenia Petrova (E)

Department of Endocrinology, Faculty of Medicine, Carol Davila University of Medicine and Pharmacy, 020021 Bucharest, Romania.
Clinical Endocrinology Department, C.I. Parhon National Institute of Endocrinology, 011683 Bucharest, Romania.

Claudiu Nistor (C)

Department 4-Cardio-Thoracic Pathology, Thoracic Surgery II Discipline, Faculty of Medicine, Carol Davila University of Medicine and Pharmacy, 020021 Bucharest, Romania.
Thoracic Surgery Department, "Dr. Carol Davila" Central Emergency University Military Hospital, 010825 Bucharest, Romania.

Mara Carsote (M)

Department of Endocrinology, Faculty of Medicine, Carol Davila University of Medicine and Pharmacy, 020021 Bucharest, Romania.
Clinical Endocrinology Department, C.I. Parhon National Institute of Endocrinology, 011683 Bucharest, Romania.

Classifications MeSH