Author/Authors :
Bakris، نويسنده , , George L. and Townsend، نويسنده , , Raymond R. and Liu، نويسنده , , Minglei and Cohen، نويسنده , , Sidney A. and D’Agostino، نويسنده , , Ralph and Flack، نويسنده , , John M. and Kandzari، نويسنده , , David E. and Katzen، نويسنده , , Barry T. and Leon، نويسنده , , Martin B. and Mauri، نويسنده , , Laura and Negoita، نويسنده , , Manuela and O’Neill، نويسنده , , William W. and Oparil، نويسنده , , Suzanne and Rocha-Singh، نويسنده , , Krishna and Bhatt، نويسنده , , Deepak L.، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
AbstractBackground
studies of catheter-based renal artery denervation have not systematically performed ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) to assess the efficacy of the procedure.
ives
CITY HTN-3 (Renal Denervation in Patients With Uncontrolled Hypertension) was a prospective, blinded, randomized, sham-controlled trial. The current analysis details the effect of renal denervation or a sham procedure on ABPM measurements 6 months post-randomization.
s
ts with resistant hypertension were randomized 2:1 to renal denervation or sham control. Patients were on a stable antihypertensive regimen including maximally tolerated doses of at least 3 drugs including a diuretic before randomization. The powered secondary efficacy endpoint was a change in mean 24-h ambulatory systolic blood pressure (SBP). Nondipper to dipper (nighttime blood pressure [BP] 10% to 20% lower than daytime BP) conversion was calculated at 6 months.
s
-h ambulatory SBP changed −6.8 ± 15.1 mm Hg in the denervation group and −4.8 ± 17.3 mm Hg in the sham group: difference of −2.0 mm Hg (95% confidence interval [CI]: −5.0 to 1.1; p = 0.98 with a 2 mm Hg superiority margin). The daytime ambulatory SBP change difference between groups was −1.1 (95% CI: −4.3 to 2.2; p = 0.52). The nocturnal ambulatory SBP change difference between groups was −3.3 (95 CI: −6.7 to 0.1; p = 0.06). The percent of nondippers converted to dippers was 21.2% in the denervation group and 15.0% in the sham group (95% CI: −3.8% to 16.2%; p = 0.30). Change in 24-h heart rate was −1.4 ± 7.4 in the denervation group and −1.3 ± 7.3 in the sham group; (95% CI: −1.5 to 1.4; p = 0.94).
sions
rial did not demonstrate a benefit of renal artery denervation on reduction in ambulatory BP in either the 24-h or day and night periods compared with sham (Renal Denervation in Patients With Uncontrolled Hypertension [SYMPLICITY HTN-3]; NCT01418261)