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Featured researches published by Ermanno Rossi.


Hypertension | 2006

Renal Damage in Primary Aldosteronism: Results of the PAPY Study

Gian Paolo Rossi; Giampaolo Bernini; Giovambattista Desideri; Bruno Fabris; Claudio Ferri; Gilberta Giacchetti; Claudio Letizia; Mauro Maccario; Massimo Mannelli; Mee Jung Matterello; Domenico Montemurro; Gaetana Palumbo; Damiano Rizzoni; Ermanno Rossi; Achille C. Pessina; Franco Mantero

Primary aldosteronism (PA) has been associated with cardiovascular hypertrophy and fibrosis, in part independent of the blood pressure level, but deleterious effects on the kidneys are less clear. Likewise, it remains unknown if the kidney can be diversely involved in PA caused by aldosterone-producing adenoma (APA) and idiopathic hyperaldosteronism (IHA). Hence, in the Primary Aldosteronism Prevalence in Italy (PAPY) Study, a prospective survey of newly diagnosed consecutive patients referred to hypertension centers nationwide, we sought signs of renal damage in patients with PA and in comparable patients with primary hypertension (PH). Patients (n=1180) underwent a predefined screening protocol followed by tests for confirming PA and identifying the underlying adrenocortical pathology. Renal damage was assessed by 24-hour urine albumin excretion (UAE) rate and glomerular filtration rate (GFR). UAE rate was measured in 490 patients; all had a normal GFR. Of them, 31 (6.4%) had APA, 33 (6.7%) had IHA, and the rest (86.9%) had PH. UAE rate was predicted (P<0.001) by body mass index, age, urinary Na+ excretion, serum K+, and mean blood pressure. Covariate-adjusted UAE rate was significantly higher in APA and IHA than in PH patients; there were more patients with microalbuminuria in the APA and IHA than in the PH group (P=0.007). Among the hypertensive patients with a preserved GFR, those with APA or IHA have a higher UAE rate than comparable PH patients. Thus, hypertension because of excess autonomous aldosterone secretion features an early and more prominent renal damage than PH.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2012

The Adrenal Vein Sampling International Study (AVIS) for Identifying the Major Subtypes of Primary Aldosteronism

Gian Paolo Rossi; Marlena Barisa; Bruno Allolio; Richard J. Auchus; Laurence Amar; Debbie L. Cohen; Christoph Degenhart; Jaap Deinum; Evelyn Fischer; Richard D. Gordon; Ralph Kickuth; Gregory Kline; André Lacroix; Steven B. Magill; Diego Miotto; Mitsuhide Naruse; Tetsuo Nishikawa; Masao Omura; Eduardo Pimenta; P.-F. Plouin; Marcus Quinkler; Martin Reincke; Ermanno Rossi; Lars Christian Rump; Fumitoshi Satoh; Leo J. Schultze Kool; Teresa Maria Seccia; Michael Stowasser; Akiyo Tanabe; Scott O. Trerotola

CONTEXT In patients who seek surgical cure of primary aldosteronism (PA), The Endocrine Society Guidelines recommend the use of adrenal vein sampling (AVS), which is invasive, technically challenging, difficult to interpret, and commonly held to be risky. OBJECTIVE The aim of this study was to determine the complication rate of AVS and the ways in which it is performed and interpreted at major referral centers. DESIGN AND SETTINGS The Adrenal Vein Sampling International Study is an observational, retrospective, multicenter study conducted at major referral centers for endocrine hypertension worldwide. PARTICIPANTS Eligible centers were identified from those that had published on PA and/or AVS in the last decade. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE The protocols, interpretation, and costs of AVS were measured, as well as the rate of adrenal vein rupture and the rate of use of AVS. RESULTS Twenty of 24 eligible centers from Asia, Australia, North America, and Europe participated and provided information on 2604 AVS studies over a 6-yr period. The percentage of PA patients systematically submitted to AVS was 77% (median; 19-100%, range). Thirteen of the 20 centers used sequential catheterization, and seven used bilaterally simultaneous catheterization; cosyntropin stimulation was used in 11 centers. The overall rate of adrenal vein rupture was 0.61%. It correlated directly with the number of AVS performed at a particular center (P = 0.002) and inversely with the number of AVS performed by each radiologist (P = 0.007). CONCLUSIONS Despite carrying a minimal risk of adrenal vein rupture and at variance with the guidelines, AVS is not used systematically at major referral centers worldwide. These findings represent an argument for defining guidelines for this clinically important but technically demanding procedure.


American Journal of Hypertension | 2002

High prevalence of primary aldosteronism using postcaptopril plasma aldosterone to renin ratio as a screening test among italian hypertensives

Ermanno Rossi; Giuseppe Regolisti; Aurelio Negro; Carlo Sani; Simona Davoli; Franco Perazzoli

The prevalence of primary aldosteronism (PA) was assessed in a specialized hypertension center. Baseline and postcaptopril (50 mg orally) aldosterone to plasma renin activity ratio (A/R) as a screening tool were preliminarily tested in a sample including 22 patients with histories of PA and 53 patients with low-renin essential hypertension (EH). Sensitivity and specificity of A/R > or =35 were 95.4% and 28.3% at baseline, compared with 100% and 67.9% after captopril. Using postcaptopril A/R > or =35 and confirmation by acute saline loading, a PA prevalence of 6.3% was found among 1046 consecutive hypertensive patients with normal renal function. Of those 66 PA patients, 16 (24.2%) had a unilateral adenoma, whereas 50 (75.8%) had idiopathic hyperaldosteronism. At presentation, 45.4% of the PA and 16.3% of EH patients were treated with two or more antihypertensive drugs (chi(2) = 33.117, P <.0001). However, among untreated patients (n = 553), the prevalence of mild-to-moderate hypertension (ie, <180/110 mm Hg) was not different between patients with PA and those with EH (70.6% v 76.7%, chi(2) = 0.086, P =.770). Serum potassium > or =3.6 mEq/L was found in 60.6% of PA patients. In conclusion, we observed the following: 1) postcaptopril compared with baseline A/R is a better screening tool for PA; 2) PA is relatively frequent among hypertensive individuals; 3) PA is not necessarily associated with severe hypertension; and 4) hypokalemia is an insensitive screening criterion for PA.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2008

Body Mass Index Predicts Plasma Aldosterone Concentrations in Overweight-Obese Primary Hypertensive Patients

Gian Paolo Rossi; Anna Belfiore; Giampaolo Bernini; Bruno Fabris; Graziella Caridi; Claudio Ferri; Gilberta Giacchetti; Claudio Letizia; Mauro Maccario; Massimo Mannelli; Gaetana Palumbo; Anna Patalano; Damiano Rizzoni; Ermanno Rossi; Achille C. Pessina; Franco Mantero

CONTEXT Body mass index (BMI) shows a direct correlation with plasma aldosterone concentration (PAC) and urinary aldosterone excretion in normotensive individuals; whether the same applies to hypertensive patients is unknown. OBJECTIVE Our objective was to determine if BMI predicts PAC and the PAC/plasma renin activity ratio [aldosterone renin ratio (ARR)] in hypertensive patients, and if this affects the identification of primary aldosteronism (PA). DESIGN This was a prospective evaluation of consecutive hypertensive patients referred nationwide to specialized hypertension centers. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Sitting PAC, plasma renin activity, and the ARR, baseline and after 50 mg captopril orally with concomitant assessment of parameters, including BMI and daily sodium intake, were calculated. RESULTS Complete biochemical data and a definite diagnosis were obtained in 1125 consecutive patients. Of them 999 had primary (essential) hypertension (PH) and 126 (11.2%) PA caused by an aldosterone-producing adenoma in 54 (4.8%). BMI independently predicted PAC (beta = 0.153; P < 0.0001) in PH, particularly in the overweight-obese, but not in the PA group. Covariance analysis and formal comparison of the raw, and the BMI-, sex-, and sodium intake-adjusted ARR with receiver operator characteristic curves, showed no significant improvement for the discrimination of aldosterone-producing adenoma from PH patients with covariate-adjusted ARR. CONCLUSIONS BMI correlated with PAC independent of age, sex, and sodium intake in PH, but not in PA patients. This association of BMI is particularly evident in overweight-obese PH patients, and suggests a pathophysiological link between visceral adiposity and aldosterone secretion. However, it does not impact on the diagnostic accuracy of the ARR for discriminating PA from PH patients.


Hypertension | 2007

Comparison of the Captopril and the Saline Infusion Test for Excluding Aldosterone-Producing Adenoma

Gian Paolo Rossi; Anna Belfiore; Giampaolo Bernini; Giovambattista Desideri; Bruno Fabris; Claudio Ferri; Gilberta Giacchetti; Claudio Letizia; Mauro Maccario; Francesca Mallamaci; Massimo Mannelli; Gaetana Palumbo; Damiano Rizzoni; Ermanno Rossi; Achille C. Pessina; Franco Mantero

We performed a prospective head-to-head comparison of the accuracy of the captopril test (CAPT) and the saline infusion test (SAL) for confirming primary aldosteronism due to an aldosterone-producing adenoma (APA) in patients with different sodium intake. A total of 317 (26.9%) of the 1125 patients screened in the Primary Aldosteronism Prevalence in Italy Study underwent both CAPT and SAL. They were composed of the patients with a high aldosterone/renin ratio baseline and 1 every 4 patients without such criterion. The accuracy of post-CAPT or post-SAL plasma aldosterone values for diagnosing APA was estimated with the area under the receiver operator characteristics curves. Primary aldosteronism was found in 120 patients, of which 46 had an APA. No untoward effect occurred with either test. The area under the receiver operator characteristics curve of plasma aldosterone for both tests was higher (P<0.0001) than that under the diagonal, but the between-test difference was borderline significant (P=0.054). The optimal aldosterone cutoff value for identifying APA was 13.9 and 6.75 ng/dL for the CAPT and SAL, respectively. Even at these cutoffs, sensitivity and specificity were moderate because of overlap of values between patients with and without APA. When examined in relation to sodium intake, the accuracy of the SAL surpassed that of the CAPT in the patients with a sodium intake ≤130 mEq per day; this difference waned at a higher Na+ intake. Thus, both the CAPT and the SAL are safe and moderately accurate for excluding APA; at a sodium intake >7.6 g per day, the SAL offers no advantage over the easier-to-perform CAPT.


American Journal of Hypertension | 1995

Alterations of calcium metabolism and of parathyroid function in primary aldosteronism, and their reversal by spironolactone or by surgical removal of aldosterone-producing adenomas

Ermanno Rossi; Carlo Sani; Franco Perazzoli; Maria Cristina Casoli; Aurelio Negro; Claudio Dotti

In order to investigate the possible existence of abnormal calcium metabolism and parathyroid function in primary aldosteronism (PA), we have compared the calcium/parathyroid hormone (PTH) profile of patients with PA with the profile of healthy normotensive subjects and of patients with essential hypertension (EH). Furthermore, we have evaluated the effects of spironolactone and the surgical removal of aldosterone-producing adenomas on the calcium/PTH profile in the PA patients. Four groups of 10 subjects each participated in the study: 1) hypertensive patients with PA, 2) patients with low-renin EH (LREH), 3) patients with normal-renin EH (NREH), 4) normotensive healthy subjects (NS). The four groups were well-matched for age, sex, body mass index, and renal function. The three hypertensive groups were also matched closely for blood pressure values and for duration of hypertension. In all subjects, after 1 week of a controlled intake of Na and K, the following parameters were measured: urine excretion of Na, K, Ca, Mg, and P, plasma levels of K, Mg, inorganic P, total calcium and ionized calcium, and plasma renin activity, aldosterone concentration, and intact PTH. Blood pressure and laboratory parameters were determined again in all the PA patients after 1 month of 100 mg daily spironolactone administration, and in four out of the 10 PA patients 2 months after surgical removal of aldosterone-producing adenomas. All of these subjects had undergone the same controlled intake of Na and K indicated above. Serum intact PTH was higher in PA patients than in the other three groups (P < .01), and serum ionized calcium was significantly higher in normotensive subjects than in the three hypertensive groups (v PA P < .01, v LREH and v NREH P < .05). An increase in serum ionized calcium and a decrease in PTH level were associated with both spironolactone administration (P < .001) and surgical treatment (P < .05). These results suggest the presence of calcium metabolism alterations in both PA and EH patients, but that these alterations are more exaggerated in PA, so that higher PTH levels are needed for maintaining low-normal levels of serum ionized calcium.


Journal of Hypertension | 2007

Prospective evaluation of the saline infusion test for excluding primary aldosteronism due to aldosterone-producing adenoma

Gian Paolo Rossi; Anna Belfiore; Giampaolo Bernini; Giovambattista Desideri; Bruno Fabris; Claudio Ferri; Gilberta Giacchetti; Claudio Letizia; Mauro Maccario; Francesca Mallamaci; Massimo Mannelli; Domenico Montemurro; Gaetana Palumbo; Damiano Rizzoni; Ermanno Rossi; Andrea Semplicini; Achille C. Pessina; Franco Mantero

Background Data on the performance of the tests used to confirm the diagnosis of primary aldosteronism (PA) are limited. Objective To prospectively investigate the accuracy of the saline infusion test (SIT). Methods Three hundred and seventeen (26.9%) out of 1125 patients screened in the PAPY study underwent measurement of plasma aldosterone, cortisol and renin activity after infusion of 2 l of isotonic saline intravenously over 4 h. They comprised patients with a baseline aldosterone/renin ratio (ARR) > 40 and one every four patients not fulfilling such criterion. The area under the receiver-operator characteristic curves (AUC) of aldosterone values after SIT was used as a measure of accuracy for diagnosing PA, aldosterone-producing adenoma (APA) or idiopathic hyperaldosteronism (IHA). Results One hundred and twenty (37.9%) patients had PA that was due to an APA in 46 (38.3%) and to IHA in 74 (61.7%). No untoward effect occurred with the SIT. The AUC (0.811 ± 0.026, 0.878 ± 0.040 and 0.784 ± 0.034 for identification of PA, APA and IHA, respectively) was higher (P < 0.0001) than that under the diagonal. By sensitivity/specificity versus criterion values plot, the best aldosterone cut-off values for identifying APA and IHA were 6.75 and 6.91 ng/dl, respectively. However, even at these optimal cut-offs, sensitivity and specificity were moderate because of values overlapping between patients with and without the disease. Moreover, there were no differences of AUC and aldosterone cut-offs between APA and IHA. Conclusion In a multicenter study the SIT was safe and specific for excluding PA, but had no place for discriminating between an APA and IHA.


Clinical Endocrinology | 1998

Screening for primary aldosteronism with a logistic multivariate discriminant analysis

Gian Paolo Rossi; Ermanno Rossi; Edoardo Pavan; Nicoletta Rosati; Roberto Zecchel; Andrea Semplicini; Franco Perazzoli; Achille C. Pessina

Primary aldosteronism (PA) is the most common endocrine cause of curable hypertension, but no single test unequivocally identifies it. Accordingly, we investigated the usefulness of a logistic multivariate discriminant analysis (MDA) approach for PA screening.


Hypertension | 2010

Within-Patient Reproducibility of the Aldosterone:Renin Ratio in Primary Aldosteronism

Gian Paolo Rossi; Teresa Maria Seccia; Gaetana Palumbo; Anna Belfiore; Giampaolo Bernini; Graziella Caridi; Giovambattista Desideri; Bruno Fabris; Claudio Ferri; Gilberta Giacchetti; Claudio Letizia; Mauro Maccario; Francesca Mallamaci; Massimo Mannelli; Anna Patalano; Damiano Rizzoni; Ermanno Rossi; Achille C. Pessina; Franco Mantero

The plasma aldosterone concentration:renin ratio (ARR) is widely used for the screening of primary aldosteronism, but its reproducibility is unknown. We, therefore, investigated the within-patient reproducibility of the ARR in a prospective multicenter study of consecutive hypertensive patients referred to specialized centers for hypertension in Italy. After the patients were carefully prepared from the pharmacological standpoint, the ARR was determined at baseline in 1136 patients and repeated after, on average, 4 weeks in the patients who had initially an ARR ≥40 and in 1 of every 4 of those with an ARR <40. The reproducibility of the ARR was assessed with Passing and Bablok and Deming regression, coefficient of reproducibility, and Bland-Altman and Mountain plots. Within-patient ARR comparison was available in 268 patients, of whom 49 had an aldosterone-producing adenoma, on the basis of the “4-corner criteria.” The ARR showed a highly significant within-patient correlation (r=0.69; P<0.0001) and reproducibility. Bland-Altman plot showed no proportional, magnitude-related, or absolute systematic error between the ARR; moreover, only 7% of the values, for example, slightly more than what could be expected by chance, fell out of the 95% CI for the between-test difference. The accuracy of each ARR for pinpointing aldosterone-producing adenoma patients was ≈80%. Thus, although it was performed under different conditions in a multicenter study, the ARR showed a good within-patient reproducibility. Hence, contrary to previously claimed poor reproducibility of the ARR, these data support its use for the screening of primary aldosteronism.


Hypertension | 2013

Elevation of Angiotensin-II Type-1-Receptor Autoantibodies Titer in Primary Aldosteronism as a Result of Aldosterone-Producing Adenoma

Giacomo Rossitto; Giuseppe Regolisti; Ermanno Rossi; Aurelio Negro; Davide Nicoli; Bruno Casali; Antonio Toniato; Brasilina Caroccia; Teresa Maria Seccia; Thomas Walther; Gian Paolo Rossi

The mechanisms of excess aldosterone secretion in primary aldosteronism (PA) remain poorly understood, although a role for circulating factors has been hypothesized for decades. Agonistic autoantibodies against type-1 angiotensin-II receptor (AT1AA) are detectable in malignant hypertension and preeclampsia and might play a role in PA. Moreover, if they were elevated in aldosterone-producing adenoma (APA) and not in idiopathic hyperaldosteronism (IHA), they might be useful for discriminating between these conditions. To test these hypotheses, we measured the titer of AT1AA in serum of 46 patients with PA (26 with APA, 20 with IHA), 62 with primary hypertension (PH), 13 preeclamptic women, and 45 healthy normotensive blood donors.We found that the AT1AA titer was higher (P<0.05) in both PA and PH patients (2.65±1.55 and 1.86±0.63, respectively) than in normotensive subjects (1.00±0.20). In APA, it was 2-fold higher than in IHA patients (3.43±1.20 versus 1.64±1.39, respectively, P<0.001), despite similar blood pressure values. Of note, it allowed effective discrimination of APA from either PH or IHA, as shown by Receiver Operator Characteristics curve analysis. Moreover, after captopril challenge, plasma aldosterone concentration fell more in AT1AA-positive than in AT1AA-negative PA patients (–32.4% [21.1–42.9] versus 0.0% [0.0–22.6], P=0.015), suggesting an agonistic role for these autoantibodies. Thus, a higher serum AT1AA titer in patients with APA than in IHA and PH patients can be useful in differentiating APA patients from either PH or IHA, and thus in selecting PA patients to be submitted to adrenal vein sampling.

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Aurelio Negro

Santa Maria Nuova Hospital

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Franco Perazzoli

Santa Maria Nuova Hospital

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Gilberta Giacchetti

Marche Polytechnic University

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Carlo Sani

Santa Maria Nuova Hospital

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