Angiographic assessment of renal artery pathology: how reliable?

Abstract
The accuracy of the angiographic interpretation of the histologic type of renal artery stenosis was assessed using a renal pathologist's diagnosis as the "gold standard." The angiograms of 42 renal artery stenoses were interpreted without other information, except age and gender, independently by six angiographers. This assessment indicated that angiography is not an accurate means by which to distinguish between the individual types of fibromuscular disease of the renal artery. However, it is a fairly accurate means by which to distinguish fibromuscular disease in general from atherosclerosis of the renal artery, 207 (82%) correct interpretations of 252. In addition, in the presence of renal artery stenosis, the absence of abdominal aortic atherosclerosis on angiography is an excellent predictor of fibromuscular renal artery disease, 17 (94%) of 18 specimens. Likewise, in the presence of a renal artery stenosis, angiographically demonstrable abdominal aortic atherosclerosis is a fair predictor of atherosclerotic renal artery disease, 16 (76%) of 21 specimens.