Aims: Patients with renal artery stenosis are treated with percutaneous intervention, but randomised studies are inconclusive. We aimed to compare renal percutaneous revascularisation versus medical therapy.
Methods and results: A systematic search for randomised controlled studies yielded three studies comparing renal angioplasty and two studies comparing renal angioplasty with stenting versus medical therapy, respectively. Six sets of data were extracted focusing on systolic and diastolic blood pressure as well as serum creatinine at follow-up. The five trials included 1,030 patients with renal artery stenosis. There was a trend toward, but no significant improvement in, systolic blood pressure (weighted mean difference [WMD] -2.76 mmHg, 95% confidence interval (CI) -5.71 to 0.18; p=0.07), diastolic blood pressure, (WMD -1.18 mmHg, 95% CI -2.69 to 0.32; p=0.12), or serum creatinine (WMD -7.26 mmol/L, 95% CI -14.99 to 0.47; p=0.07) in the patients who underwent percutaneous intervention compared to the medical therapy group. All but one trial showed at least a moderate overall bias risk.
Conclusions: We did not find a significant improvement in blood pressure or renal function in patients with renal artery stenosis treated with renal artery revascularisation compared to medical therapy alone. However, trial quality was a limitation.