# Adrenalectomy as a Treatment Option for Primary Aldosteronism in the Era of Robotic-Assisted Surgeries—Is It Time to Use It More Often?

**Authors:** Orit Raz, Naomi Nakash Niddam, Fahed Atamna, Alla Simonovsky, Sergey Litvin, Mia Leonov Polak, Adi Leiba, Dor Golomb

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jcm15010173 · Journal of Clinical Medicine · 2025-12-25

## TL;DR

Robotic adrenalectomy is a safe and effective treatment for primary aldosteronism, leading to improved blood pressure and hormone levels.

## Contribution

Demonstrates high success rates of robotic adrenalectomy for small aldosterone-producing adenomas in primary aldosteronism.

## Key findings

- 55.5% of patients achieved complete clinical success with normalized blood pressure and hormone levels.
- No intra- or postoperative complications occurred in the study cohort.
- Median operative time was 110 minutes with a short hospital stay of 3 days.

## Abstract

Objectives: To evaluate clinical and biochemical outcomes of robotic-assisted laparoscopic adrenalectomy in patients with primary aldosteronism (PA) due to small aldosterone-producing adenomas, with emphasis on blood pressure (BP) control, antihypertensive medication burden, hormonal normalization, and safety. Methods: We prospectively enrolled PA patients (aldosterone >10 ng/dL, renin <2 μU/mL) undergoing robotic adrenalectomy by a single surgeon. Exclusions included suspected pheochromocytoma, other adrenal pathologies, or malignancy. Outcomes were classified per PASO criteria at 6 months: complete success (BP <140/90 mmHg without medications + normalized aldosterone (<10 ng/dL) and renin (>2 μU/mL)), partial success (improvement in BP control with reduced medication and/or partial biochemical improvement), and failure (persistent hypertension and abnormal hormone levels). Results: From 2019 to present, 18 patients (median age 53 years; 13 male) with a median adenoma size of 15 mm (IQR 10–19.8) underwent robotic adrenalectomy (12 left, 6 right). Three (16.7%) with bilateral imaging findings had adrenal vein sampling to confirm unilateral disease. At 6 months, complete clinical success was achieved in 10 (55.5%) patients, partial success in 7 (38.9%), and failure in 1 (5.6%). Biochemically, 12 achieved complete normalization, 3 achieved partial improvement, and 3 did not complete testing. Median operative time was 110 min (IQR 100–120); median hospital stay was 3 days (IQR 3–4). No intra- or postoperative complications, transfusions, infections, or readmissions occurred. Conclusions: Robotic adrenalectomy for small aldosterone-producing adenomas in PA is safe, with high rates of BP normalization and hormonal remission and significantly reduced antihypertensive medication burden.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** primary aldosteronism (MONDO:0001422), pheochromocytoma (MONDO:0004974)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** REN (renin) [NCBI Gene 5972] {aka ADTKD4, HNFJ2, RTD}
- **Diseases:** adenoma (MESH:D000236), hypertension (MESH:D006973), pheochromocytoma (MESH:D010673), aldosterone-producing adenomas (MESH:D006929), malignancy (MESH:D009369), PA (OMIM:617027), infections (MESH:D007239)
- **Chemicals:** aldosterone (MESH:D000450)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

9 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12787028/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12787028