articleNew England Journal of MedicineMar 29, 2014Closed access

A Controlled Trial of Renal Denervation for Resistant Hypertension

Brigham and Women's Hospital · Harvard University · +16 more institutions

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Background

Prior unblinded studies have suggested that catheter-based renal-artery denervation reduces blood pressure in patients with resistant hypertension.

Methods

We designed a prospective, single-blind, randomized, sham-controlled trial. Patients with severe resistant hypertension were randomly assigned in a 2:1 ratio to undergo renal denervation or a sham procedure. Before randomization, patients were receiving a stable antihypertensive regimen involving maximally tolerated doses of at least three drugs, including a diuretic. The primary efficacy end point was the change in office systolic blood pressure at 6 months; a secondary efficacy end point was the change in mean 24-hour ambulatory systolic blood pressure. The primary safety end point was a composite of death, end-stage renal disease, embolic events resulting in end-organ damage, renovascular complications, or hypertensive crisis at 1 month or new renal-artery stenosis of more than 70% at 6 months.

Citation impact

2,157
total citations
FWCI
260.55
Percentile
100%
References
27
Citations per year

Authors

15

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Medicine
  • Resistant hypertension
  • Denervation
  • Cardiology
  • Internal medicine
  • Intensive care medicine
  • Blood pressure
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
No related works found for this paper.