Renal Sympathetic Denervation in Patients With Treatment-Resistant Hypertension After Witnessed Intake of Medication Before Qualifying Ambulatory Blood Pressure

Author:

Fadl Elmula Fadl Elmula Mohamed1,Hoffmann Pavel1,Fossum Eigil1,Brekke Magne1,Gjønnæss Eyvind1,Hjørnholm Ulla1,Kjær Vibeke N.1,Rostrup Morten1,Kjeldsen Sverre E.1,Os Ingrid1,Stenehjem Aud-E1,Høieggen Aud1

Affiliation:

1. From the Section for Cardiovascular and Renal Research, Department of Cardiology, Medical Clinic (F.E.M.F.E., S.E.K.), Department of Acute Medicine, Medical Clinic (U.H., V.N.K., M.R.), Department of Nephrology, Medical Clinic (I.O., A.S., A.H.), Section for Interventional Cardiology, Department of Cardiology, Heart-, Lung-, and Vascular-Disease Clinic (P.H., E.F., M.B.), and Section for Vascular Intervention, Department of Radiology, Clinic for Laboratory Medicine (E.G.), Oslo University Hospital,...

Abstract

It is unknown whether the decline in blood pressure (BP) after renal denervation (RDN) is caused by denervation itself or concomitantly improved drug adherence. We aimed to investigate the BP lowering effect of RDN in true treatment-resistant hypertension by excluding patients with poor drug adherence. Patients with resistant hypertension (n=18) were referred for a thorough clinical and laboratory work-up. Treatment-resistant hypertension was defined as office systolic BP>140 mm Hg, despite maximally tolerated doses of ≥3 antihypertensive drugs, including a diuretic. In addition, ambulatory daytime systolic BP>135 mm Hg was required after witnessed intake of antihypertensive drugs to qualify. RDN (n=6) was performed with Symplicity Catheter System. The mean office and ambulatory BPs remained unchanged at 1, 3, and 6 months in the 6 patients, whereas there was no known change in antihypertensive medication. Two patients, however, had a fall in both office and ambulatory BPs. Our findings question whether BP falls in response to RDN in patients with true treatment-resistant hypertension. Additional research must aim to verify potential BP lowering effect and identify a priori responders to RDN before this invasive method can routinely be applied to patients with drug-resistant hypertension. Clinical Trial Registration— URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov . Unique identifier: NCT01673516.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Internal Medicine

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