Hypertension
Conditions
Brief summary
Hypertension represents a significant global public health problem, contributing to vascular and renal morbidity, cardiovascular mortality, and economic burden. For a mostly asymptomatic disease, there is a huge challenge to maintain a good adherence and longtime persistence of drug use so as to adequately control it. Even so, a significant proportion of patients will develop resistant hypertension. In recent years, renal denervation has been argued as an effective means to address blood pressure problem in several non-Chinese clinical trials. The technique is to deliver low level radiofrequency energy through the renal artery wall to target the sympathetic nervous system and then modulate blood pressure. Shanghai WiseGain Medical Devices Co., LTD has developed the WiseGo Catheter System, which is an irrigated radiofrequency ablation Catheter. With this Catheter, it is expected to improve blood pressure status among patients with resistant hypertension failing polypharmacy. The purpose of this randomized control trial is to obtain an assessment of the efficacy and safety of WiseGo renal denervation technique in the presence of three standard antihypertensive medications in Chinese patients.
Interventions
Subjects will be treated with the renal denervation procedure using WiseGo Catheter System after randomization.
Standardised triple anti-hypertensive medications of amlodipine 5 mg per day, losartan potassium 50 mg and hydrochlorothiazide 12.5 mg per day in the first 90 days after randomization. Subjects will be allowed to adjust baseline antihypertensive medications where clinically necessary in the second 90 days after randomization.
Sponsors
Study design
Eligibility
Inclusion criteria
1. Subject with primary hypertension has 24-hour ambulatory systolic blood pressure ≥ 135 mmHg and office systolic blood pressure ≥ 140 mmHg /office diastolic blood pressure ≥ 90 mmHg after a 4-week standardised triple therapy. 2. Subject is ≥ 18 and \< 80 years old at time of randomization. 3. Subject agrees to have all study procedures performed, and willing to provide written informed consent to participate in this clinical study.
Exclusion criteria
1. Subject has acute or serious systemic infection. 2. Subject has a history of renal artery interventional therapy. 3. Subject lacks suitable renal artery anatomy for percutaneous renal sympathetic nerve radiofrequency ablation surgery, including not limited to a presence of serious aorta or renal-artery tortuosity or renal-artery stenosis. 4. Subject has experienced a myocardial infarction, unstable angina pectoris, syncope, or a cerebrovascular accident within three months of the screening period, or has widespread atherosclerosis, with documented intravascular thrombosis. 5. Subject has aortic dissection aneurysm. 6. Subject has primary pulmonary hypertension. 7. Subject has an estimated glomerular filtration rate of less than 40 mL/min/1.73m² according to Modification of Diet in Renal Disease formula. 8. Subject had a definite diagnose of coronary heart disease requiring beta blockers 9. Subject has a Class III - IV of heart failure or left ventricular ejection fraction \<45%. 10. Subject had atrial fibrillation. 11. Subject has a significant bleeding tendency or blood system disease(s). 12. Subject has a malignancy or end-stage disease(s). 13. Subject has secondary hypertension. 14. Subject has type 1 diabetes mellitus. 15. Subject has other conditions inappropriate for participation at the investigator's discretion. 16. Subject has a medical ethics of concern at the investigator's discretion, such as a presence of 24-hour Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring average systolic blood pressure ≥ 170 mmHg after a 4-week standardised triple therapy.
Design outcomes
Primary
| Measure | Time frame |
|---|---|
| Change in average 24-hour systolic blood pressure by ambulatory blood pressure monitoring from baseline | 3 months post-randomization |
Secondary
| Measure | Time frame | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Incidence of achieving target blood pressure | 6 months post-randomization | Target blood pressure is defined as daytime ambulatory blood pressure \<135/85mmHg, nighttime ambulatory blood pressure \<120/70mmHg or average 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure \<130/80mmHg, respectively |
| Change in daytime and nighttime ambulatory systolic blood pressure from baseline | 3 months post-randomization | — |
| Change in 24 hour average, daytime and nighttime ambulatory diastolic blood pressure from baseline | 3 months post-randomization | — |
| Change in serum creatinine from baseline | 6 months post-randomization | — |
| Incidence of adverse event | Through study completion, up to 6 months | — |
Other
| Measure | Time frame | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Change in office systolic/diastolic blood pressure from baseline | 6 months post-randomization | — |
| Change in patient-recorded home systolic/diastolic blood pressure from baseline | 6 months post-randomization | — |
| Incidences of achieving reductions of ≥ 5 mmHg, ≥ 10 mmHg, ≥15 mmHg, and ≥ 20 mmHg in blood pressure, including ambulatory, office and home blood pressure | 6 months post-randomization | — |
| Incidences of substantially adjusting antihypertensive medications | 6 months post-randomization | A substantial adjustment of antihypertensive medications is defined as any changes in number of antihypertensive medications, or type of antihypertensive medications, or ≥ 50% dose change in any ongoing antihypertensive medications in the last two weeks. |
| Change in 24 hour average, daytime and nighttime ambulatory systolic/diastolic blood pressure from baseline | 6 months post-randomization | — |
Countries
China