Author: Townsend, Raymond R
Title: Interventional management in hypertension: where do we stand? Cord-id: 89amzixp Document date: 2014_1_1
ID: 89amzixp
Snippet: PURPOSE OF REVIEW Device-based interventions to lower drug-resistant hypertension have made the management of this disorder more complicated. In this review, we will focus on developments in this approach to blood pressure care which have appeared over the last year in a published or abstract form. RECENT FINDINGS Much of the recent literature in this area is characterized by very large office systolic blood pressure reductions, on the order of 25 mmHg at 6 months after intervention. However, th
Document: PURPOSE OF REVIEW Device-based interventions to lower drug-resistant hypertension have made the management of this disorder more complicated. In this review, we will focus on developments in this approach to blood pressure care which have appeared over the last year in a published or abstract form. RECENT FINDINGS Much of the recent literature in this area is characterized by very large office systolic blood pressure reductions, on the order of 25 mmHg at 6 months after intervention. However, the largest and the most rigorously conducted trial of renal denervation failed to meet its efficacy endpoint. We will review some speculations on why that may have occurred. SUMMARY There is little guidance for the management of drug-resistant hypertension in existing guidelines due largely to an absence of clinical trials with hard cardiovascular outcomes; thus, most of the literature relies on short-term (generally less than 1 year) studies that are oriented toward efficacy (i.e., blood pressure reduction per se). With the failure of the Symplicity HTN3 trial to meet its efficacy endpoint, the entire field of renal denervation is under careful scrutiny. From this reviewer's perspective, this finding seems to be more of a speed-bump than a 'road closed' sign for renal denervation, a prompt to reconsider the adequacy of denervation techniques and an encouragement to continue the search for robust predictors of clinical response.
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