FFR Assessment for the Selection of Hypertensive Patients Who Benefit from Renal Stenting

Atherosclerotic renal artery stenosis (ARAS) represents one of the main causes of secondary hypertension (HTN) and is associated with a higher risk of renal deterioration and cardiovascular events. However, contemporary randomized trials have failed to demonstrate a clear benefit of systematic stenting compared with optimal medical therapy.

Presion arterial sistólica

One of the main criticisms of these studies was the inclusion of patients with angiographically significant stenoses that were likely not functionally significant. In this context, physiological assessment using FFR, already widely validated in the coronary territory, emerges as a potential strategy for the proper identification of functionally significant lesions.

The FAIR study, recently published in the European Heart Journal, addresses this question by comparing an FFR-guided renal revascularization strategy with stenting versus a standard angiography-guided strategy in patients with renal artery stenosis (RAS) and uncontrolled hypertension.

A total of 101 patients with ≥50% stenosis in at least one main renal artery (diameter ≥4 mm) and uncontrolled HTN despite the use of ≥2 antihypertensive medications were included. Patients were randomized 1:1 to an angiography-guided strategy (stenting regardless of FFR value) or an FFR-guided strategy (stenting only if FFR <0.80). Renal hyperemia was induced with selectively injected dopamine.

Read also: Transcatheter Deep Vein Arterialization in Critical Limb Ischemia Without Revascularization Options.

The primary endpoints were the percentage change in mean daytime systolic blood pressure (mDSBP) measured by ambulatory monitoring and the change in the composite antihypertensive medication index (CAMI) at 3 months.

No differences were observed between both strategies in the percentage reduction of mDSBP (4% vs 4%; p=0.97) or in CAMI (0% vs 1%; p=0.33). The stenting rate was significantly lower (54% fewer procedures) in the FFR-guided group (46.0% vs 100.0%; p<0.01).

Among patients treated with stents who had FFR <0.80, compared with those with FFR ≥0.80 who did not undergo stenting, an adjusted reduction in mDSBP of 6.2 mmHg (95% CI 0.6–11.9; p=0.04) and a decrease in CAMI of 3.1 (95% CI 1.5–4.7; p<0.01) were observed.

Read also: Duration of Smoking Cessation and Risk of Amputation After Revascularization in Critical Limb Ischemia.

The correlation between angiographic stenosis severity and FFR was low (r = −0.21; p=0.17), highlighting the limited ability of angiography to define functional lesion relevance. According to ROC analysis, an FFR cutoff of 0.78 was identified as optimal for predicting significant blood pressure improvement (AUC 0.78).

Conclusions: impact of FFR-guided strategy on renal stenting and blood pressure control

The FAIR study showed that an FFR-guided strategy in atherosclerotic renal artery stenosis significantly reduces the number of implanted stents without compromising blood pressure control, suggesting a clinical benefit of stenting in patients with FFR <0.80. Although this is a pilot study with a small sample size and short follow-up, it supports the incorporation of functional criteria into decision-making for ARAS.

Original itle: Fractional flow reserve-guided renal artery stenting in atherosclerotic renovascular hypertension: the FAIR randomized trial.

Reference: Li Y, Zheng J, Lu C, Fan F, Liu Z, Liu S, Yi T, Zhang L, Weng H, Wang B, Liu X, Zhou H, Ma D, Jia Z, Xiang L, Yang R, Shi D, Chen H, Xu L, Liu C, Kario K, Zhang Y, Li J. Fractional flow reserve-guided renal artery stenting in atherosclerotic renovascular hypertension: the FAIR randomized trial. Eur Heart J. 2026 Feb 11;47(6):761-769. doi: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehaf746. PMID: 41056188.


Subscribe to our weekly newsletter

Get the latest scientific articles on interventional cardiology

Dr. Omar Tupayachi
Dr. Omar Tupayachi
Member of the Editorial Board of solaci.org

More articles by this author

Therapeutic strategies in carotid free-floating thrombus: evidence and controversies

Carotid free-floating thrombus (cFFT) is a rare entity with a high embolic risk, associated with acute neurological events such as stroke or transient ischemic...

ACC 2026 | SirPAD Trial: Sirolimus-coated balloon angioplasty in infrainguinal arterial disease

Paclitaxel-coated balloons have demonstrated improved patency in peripheral arterial disease (PAD), although questions remain regarding safety and applicability across different vascular territories. In this...

ACC 2026 | HI-PEITHO: Catheter-directed strategy (EKOS) in intermediate-risk acute pulmonary embolism

The treatment of intermediate-risk pulmonary embolism (PE) continues to be an area of therapeutic uncertainty. The initial PEITHO study (2014) demonstrated a reduction in...

ACVC 2026 | FLASH Registry European Cohort: Mechanical Thrombectomy in Pulmonary Embolism

The management of intermediate-high and high-risk pulmonary embolism (PE) remains an area of therapeutic uncertainty, particularly in patients with right ventricular (RV) dysfunction, in...

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Related Articles

SOLACI Sessionsspot_img

Recent Articles

Management of Valve Thrombosis in TAVI: Current Evidence-Based Approach

The expansion of transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) into younger and lower-risk populations has brought bioprosthetic valve thrombosis to the forefront as a clinically...

Experience with the intra-annular self-expanding Navitor valve: data from the STS/ACC TVT registry

The expansion of TAVI, with the introduction of new-generation devices, has prioritized not only periprocedural safety, but also the preservation of coronary access, more...

Therapeutic strategies in carotid free-floating thrombus: evidence and controversies

Carotid free-floating thrombus (cFFT) is a rare entity with a high embolic risk, associated with acute neurological events such as stroke or transient ischemic...