Tackling hypertension at source

Hudson Institute

Associate Professor Jun Yang ended up tackling hypertension almost by accident. It was a simple suggestion that led her to begin studying primary aldosteronism (PA), but when she discovered both her parents had the condition, she know she was onto something.

Associate Professor Jun Yang and hypertension clinical trial patient David
Associate Professor Jun Yang and clinical trial patient David

That initial prompt from her supervisor, two years into her PhD, to develop a hospital protocol for PA led her to big things.

“Once I started reading about the topic, I couldn’t stop,” A/Prof Yang says. “There seemed to be so much hypertension (high blood pressure) out there, either not diagnosed or diagnosed too late.”

The more she investigated, the more she found patients with hypertension that would not respond to the usual treatments, and frequently the cause was PA.

“As a result, we were seeing patients with totally preventable cardiovascular disease, caused by decades of poorly controlled hypertension and organ damage.”

Tackling hypertension for 600,000 Australians

Further research established that of the one-in-three Australian adults with hypertension, at least 10 per cent have PA; equating to approximately 600,000 people in Australia.

“In people with PA the adrenal glands produce too much aldosterone, a salt retaining hormone,” A/Prof Yang explains. “As well as hypertension, PA increases the risk of stroke, heart attack and kidney disease, but it is rarely diagnosed. Yet, if it is accurately diagnosed, PA can be cured or effectively treated using a simple medication.”

Now, as Head of the Endocrine Hypertension Research Group at Hudson Institute, alongside PhD candidates Dr Renata Libianto and Dr Elisabeth Ng, A/Prof Yang is working with GPs and hospitals to improve this situation on two fronts.

Firstly, to help GPs diagnose PA in patients with hypertension, and secondly with hospitals to ensure they are equipped to deal with the expected influx of PA cases coming their way.

She recently received a Federal Government-funded MRFF clinical trials activity grant of $2,290,000 over four years for a trial running in three states, aiming to increase diagnosis of PA.

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