# Follow-up patterns after positive primary aldosteronism screening

**Authors:** Raul Herrera, Michael Salim, Meng Xu, Sisi Ma, Jacob Kohlenberg, Kidmealem Zekarias

PMC · DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0333534 · PLOS One · 2025-10-23

## TL;DR

This study shows that most patients with positive primary aldosteronism screening tests do not receive proper follow-up care, suggesting a need for standardized guidelines and automated alerts.

## Contribution

The study identifies inadequate follow-up patterns after positive PA screening and links them to patient characteristics like language and socioeconomic status.

## Key findings

- 30-38% of patients with positive PA screening results lacked appropriate follow-up care.
- History of hypokalemia and higher socioeconomic status were associated with better follow-up.
- Standardized criteria and automated alerts are recommended to improve follow-up consistency.

## Abstract

Primary aldosteronism (PA) screening remains underdiagnosed at <2% of eligible patients, with inconsistent interpretation of positive screening results across institutions. This study investigated whether patients with positive PA case screening test results received appropriate follow-up interventions. We assessed plasma renin activity (PRA) and aldosterone concentration (PAC), calculating the aldosterone-to-renin ratio (ARR). Three commonly used criteria defined positive case detection: PAC ≥ 10 ng/dL and PRA < 1 ng/mL/h; ARR ≥ 20 and PAC ≥ 10 ng/dL; and ARR ≥ 30 and PAC ≥ 10 ng/dL. We identified 237 patients meeting at least one criterion between April 2018 and May 2023, then assessed follow-up care at least 6 months post-screening. Adequate follow-up included documented abnormal results in progress notes, further PA diagnostics, new MRA treatment, or specialist referral. Inadequate follow-up was observed across all screening criteria: 37% (82/222) of patients meeting PAC ≥ 10 ng/dL and PRA < 1 ng/mL/h, 38% (89/237) of those meeting ARR ≥ 20 and PAC ≥ 10 ng/dL, and 30% (53/180) of those meeting ARR ≥ 30 and PAC ≥ 10 ng/dL lacked appropriate care. History of hypokalemia (p < 0.001), English as primary language (p ≤ 0.007), and higher socioeconomic status (p ≤ 0.06) were consistently associated with adequate follow-up. These findings highlight the need for standardized criteria and automated alerts to improve follow-up after positive PA screening.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** Primary aldosteronism (MONDO:0001422), hypokalemia (MONDO:0003019)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** REN (renin) [NCBI Gene 5972] {aka ADTKD4, HNFJ2, RTD}
- **Diseases:** PA (OMIM:617027), hypokalemia (MESH:D007008)
- **Chemicals:** aldosterone (MESH:D000450)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

28 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12548854/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12548854