“…Higher rates of cardiovascular complications and renal damage compared to essential hypertensives, potentially reversible with surgical or medical treatment, demonstrate the enormous significance of specific and reliable diagnostic tools for differentiating the two most common subtypes, APA and BHA [12,24]. The high diagnostic accuracy and extremely low rate of complications (0.61%), coupled with an improved outcome of AVS guided surgical management according to a global multicenter study [25] and a large registry study (> 1600) [26], represent crucial assets of AVS and have led to its endorsement in the majority of PA patients, excluding patients unable or unwilling to undergo surgical treatment [3,13]. Despite this recommendation in the current guidelines by the Endocrine society, it is not universally performed-potentially due a formed impression of AVS as a challenging, complex intervention with a high failure rate, and a tendency towards avoidance of AVS for easier, though less specific alternatives, such as the sole employment of CT/MRI [1, 2, 4, 6, 8-11, 13, 17].…”