4.5 Article

Blood pressure reductions following catheter-based renal denervation are not related to improvements in adherence to antihypertensive drugs measured by urine/plasma toxicological analysis

Journal

CLINICAL RESEARCH IN CARDIOLOGY
Volume 104, Issue 12, Pages 1097-1105

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00392-015-0905-5

Keywords

Resistant hypertension; Sympathetic nervous system; Renal denervation; Adherence to drug treatment; Liquid chromatography-high resolution tandem mass spectrometry

Funding

  1. Deutsche Hochdruckliga
  2. Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Kardiologie
  3. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [KFO 196]

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Renal denervation can reduce blood pressure in patients with uncontrolled hypertension. The adherence to prescribed antihypertensive medication following renal denervation is unknown. This study investigated adherence to prescribed antihypertensive treatment by liquid chromatography-high resolution tandem mass spectrometry in plasma and urine at baseline and 6 months after renal denervation in 100 patients with resistant hypertension, defined as baseline office systolic blood pressure a parts per thousand yen140 mmHg despite treatment with a parts per thousand yen3 antihypertensive agents. At baseline, complete adherence to all prescribed antihypertensive agents was observed in 52 patients, 46 patients were partially adherent, and two patients were completely non-adherent. Baseline office blood pressure was 167/88 +/- A 19/16 mmHg with a corresponding 24-h blood pressure of 154/86 +/- A 15/13 mmHg. Renal denervation significantly reduced office and ambulatory blood pressure at 6-month follow-up by 15/5 mmHg (p < 0.001/p < 0.001) and 8/4 mmHg (p < 0.001/p = 0.001), respectively. Mean adherence to prescribed treatment was significantly reduced from 85.0 % at baseline to 80.7 %, 6 months after renal denervation (p = 0.005). The blood pressure decrease was not explained by improvements in adherence following the procedure. Patients not responding to treatment significantly reduced their drug intake following the procedure. Adherence was highest for angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors/angiotensin receptor blockers and beta blockers (> 90 %) and lowest for vasodilators (21 %). In conclusion, renal denervation can reduce office and ambulatory blood pressure in patients with resistant hypertension despite a significant reduction in adherence to antihypertensive treatment after 6 months.

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