Renal sympathetic denervation 2024 in Austria: recommendations from the Austrian Society of Hypertension : Endorsed by the Austrian Society of Nephrology and the Working Group of Interventional Cardiology of the Austrian Society of Cardiology.
David ZweikerChristian KoppelstätterKatharina HohensteinIrene LangSabine PerlHeiko BuggerMathias-Christoph BrandtSabine HornRonald K BinderBruno WatschingerMatthias FrickAlexander NiessnerThomas WeberPublished in: Wiener klinische Wochenschrift (2024)
Renal sympathetic denervation (RDN) is an interventional supplement to medical treatment in patients with arterial hypertension. While the first sham-controlled trial, SYMPLICITY HTN‑3 was neutral, with improved procedural details, patient selection and follow-up, recent randomized sham-controlled trials of second-generation devices show a consistent blood pressure lowering effect of RDN, as compared to sham controls. These new data and the recent U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) premarket approval of two RDN devices are the basis for the present recommendations update.This joint position paper from the Austrian Society of Hypertension, together with the Austrian Society of Nephrology and the Working Group of Interventional Cardiology from the Austrian Society of Cardiology includes an overview about the available evidence on RDN and gives specific recommendations for the work-up, patient selection, pretreatment, procedural management and follow-up in patients undergoing RDN in Austria. Specifically, RDN may be used in clinical routine care, together with lifestyle measures and antihypertensive drugs, in patients with resistant hypertension (i.e. uncontrolled blood pressure on 3 antihypertensive drugs) and in those with uncontrolled hypertension, after adequate work-up, if institutional, patient-related and procedural conditions are fulfilled.
Keyphrases
- blood pressure
- hypertensive patients
- double blind
- heart rate
- arterial hypertension
- patients undergoing
- healthcare
- case report
- cardiac surgery
- drug administration
- open label
- clinical practice
- blood glucose
- physical activity
- metabolic syndrome
- palliative care
- randomized controlled trial
- electronic health record
- weight loss
- phase iii
- deep learning