Abstract

After three years of excessive confidence, overoptimistic expectations and performance of 15 to 20,000 renal denervation procedures in Europe, the failure of a single well-designed US trial—Symplicity HTN-3—to meet its primary efficacy endpoint has cast doubt on renal denervation as a whole. The use of a sound methodology, including randomisation and blinded endpoint assessment was enough to see the typical 25–30 mmHg systolic blood pressure decrease observed after renal denervation melt down to less than 3 mmHg, the rest being likely explained by Hawthorne and placebo effects, attenuation of white coat effect, regression to the mean and other physician and patient-related biases. The modest blood pressure benefit directly assignable to renal denervation should be balanced with unresolved safety issues, such as potentially increased risk of renal artery stenosis after the procedure (more than ten cases reported up to now, most of them in 2014), unclear long-term impact on renal function and lack of morbidity–mortality data. Accordingly, there is no doubt that renal denervation is not ready for clinical use. Still, renal denervation is supported by a strong rationale and is occasionally followed by major blood pressure responses in at-risk patients who may otherwise have remained uncontrolled. Upcoming research programmes should focus on identification of those few patients with truly resistant hypertension who may derive a substantial benefit from the technique, within the context of well-designed randomised trials and independent registries. While electrical stimulation of baroreceptors and other interventional treatments of hypertension are already “knocking at the door”, the premature and uncontrolled dissemination of renal denervation should remain an example of what should not be done, and trigger radical changes in evaluation processes of new devices by national and European health authorities.

Highlights

  • In 2009, Krum and colleagues [1] published a nonrandomised proof-of-concept study, testing percutaneous radiofrequency catheter-based renal sympathetic denervation (RDN) as a novel treatment of resistant hypertension in a cohort of 45 patients

  • One hundred patients were assessed for the primary endpoint at 6 months: in the RDN group (n=49), office blood pressure decreased by 32/12 mmHg (P

  • While it was previously assumed that RDN was rather easy to perform, they put forward the lack of experience of Symplicity HTN-3 investigators [42]. They suggest that patients in Symplicity HTN-3 were not the right ones [46] [47], that selection based—even partly—on ambulatory blood pressure may be inappropriate [46], and that, after all, if RDN is less effective than expected, it may have benefits beyond blood pressure [48] and cure other diseases

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Summary

Introduction

In 2009, Krum and colleagues [1] published a nonrandomised proof-of-concept study, testing percutaneous radiofrequency catheter-based renal sympathetic denervation (RDN) as a novel treatment of resistant hypertension in a cohort of 45 patients.

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