Although patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) are at high risk for restenosis that requires repeat revascularization after balloon angioplasty, their restenosis rate after coronary stenting is still unknown. Over a 4-year period, we performed coronary stenting on 40 lesions in 34 patients with ESRD. We compared these lesions with 80 lesions from patients without renal disease who underwent coronary stenting in the STARS and WINS clinical trials, matched for treatment site, diabetes, lesion length, and reference vessel diameter. Quantitative coronary angiography was performed on all lesions and clinical outcomes were assessed at 9-month follow-up. Clinical and angiographic characteristics were well matched between the 2 groups and acute clinical success rates were similar. Despite comparable initial angiographic results over the 9-month follow-up period, repeat target lesion revascularization was twice as frequent in the ESRD group compared with the control group (35% vs 16%, p <0.05). After adjusting for differences in postprocedural minimum lumen diameter and other angiographic and clinical characteristics, ESRD remained the most important predictor of late target lesion revascularization (relative risk = 2.3, p = 0.04). In addition, overall 9-month mortality was higher for ESRD patients than for the control population (18% vs 2%, p <0.01). Thus, despite similar angiographic results, patients with ESRD are at higher risk for target lesion revascularization after coronary stenting than controls. Nonetheless, most patients with ESRD do not develop restenosis after stent placement, suggesting an important role for stenting in the management of this challenging population.