Natural history of small asymptomatic kidney and residual stones over a long-term follow-up: systematic review over 25 years
Natural history of small asymptomatic kidney and residual stones over a long-term follow-up: systematic review over 25 years
Objective: to systematically review the natural history of small asymptomatic kidney and residual stones, as the incidental identification of small, asymptomatic renal calculi has risen with increasing use of high-resolution imaging.
Materials and methods: we reviewed the natural history of small asymptomatic kidney and residual stones using the Cochrane and Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) methodology. We searched MEDLINE, Scopus, EMBASE, EBSCO, Cochrane library and Clinicaltrials.gov using themes of ‘asymptomatic’, ‘nephrolithiasis’, ‘observation’, ‘symptoms’, ‘admission’, ‘intervention’ and similar allied terms for all English language articles from 1996 to 2020 (25 years). Inclusion criteria were studies with ≥50 patients, stones ≤10 mm, and a mean follow-up of ≥24 months. Primary outcomes were occurrence of symptoms, emergency admission, and interventions.
Results: our literature search returned 2247 results of which 10 papers were included in the final review. Risk of symptomatic episodes ranged from 0% to 59.4%. Meta-analysis did not identify any significant difference in the likelihood of developing symptoms when comparing stones <5 mm to those >5 mm, nor those <10 mm to those >10 mm. Risk of admission varied from 14% to 19% and the risk of intervention from 12% to 35%. Meta-analysis showed a significantly decreased likelihood of intervention for stones <5 vs >5 mm and <10 vs >10 mm. Studies had variable risk of bias due to heterogeneous reporting of outcome measures with significant likelihood that observed differences in results were compatible with chance alone (Symptoms: I2=0%, Cochran’s Q = 3.09, P = 0.69; Intervention: I2=0%, Cochran’s Q = 1.76, P = 0.88).
Conclusions: the present systematic review indicates that stone size is not a reliable predictor of symptoms; however, risk of intervention is greater for stones >5mm vs <5 mm and >10 vs <10 mm. This review will inform urologists as they discuss management strategies with patients who have asymptomatic renal stones and offer insight to committees during the development of evidence-based guidelines.
asymptomatic nephrolithiasis, intervention, surveillance, symptoms
Lovegrove, Catherine E.
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Geraghty, Robert M.
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Yang, Bingyuan
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Brain, Eleanor
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Howles, Sarah
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Turney, Ben
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Somani, Bhaskar
ab5fd1ce-02df-4b88-b25e-8ece396335d9
Lovegrove, Catherine E.
75e35f42-c21c-45c6-bd54-88132d3c097f
Geraghty, Robert M.
b61cc410-b599-4a3a-8ba4-5e5fe3934b0e
Yang, Bingyuan
6cad679a-ee25-4bc2-a7d1-bea34de604e9
Brain, Eleanor
f0cd0074-888a-44a8-9b16-c91d8b89743d
Howles, Sarah
269413bf-4c9a-459c-aef6-98fc12c1ed0b
Turney, Ben
7f8ca0ab-341d-495a-806b-025d3cf5180e
Somani, Bhaskar
ab5fd1ce-02df-4b88-b25e-8ece396335d9
Lovegrove, Catherine E., Geraghty, Robert M., Yang, Bingyuan, Brain, Eleanor, Howles, Sarah, Turney, Ben and Somani, Bhaskar
(2021)
Natural history of small asymptomatic kidney and residual stones over a long-term follow-up: systematic review over 25 years.
BJU International.
(doi:10.1111/bju.15522).
Abstract
Objective: to systematically review the natural history of small asymptomatic kidney and residual stones, as the incidental identification of small, asymptomatic renal calculi has risen with increasing use of high-resolution imaging.
Materials and methods: we reviewed the natural history of small asymptomatic kidney and residual stones using the Cochrane and Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) methodology. We searched MEDLINE, Scopus, EMBASE, EBSCO, Cochrane library and Clinicaltrials.gov using themes of ‘asymptomatic’, ‘nephrolithiasis’, ‘observation’, ‘symptoms’, ‘admission’, ‘intervention’ and similar allied terms for all English language articles from 1996 to 2020 (25 years). Inclusion criteria were studies with ≥50 patients, stones ≤10 mm, and a mean follow-up of ≥24 months. Primary outcomes were occurrence of symptoms, emergency admission, and interventions.
Results: our literature search returned 2247 results of which 10 papers were included in the final review. Risk of symptomatic episodes ranged from 0% to 59.4%. Meta-analysis did not identify any significant difference in the likelihood of developing symptoms when comparing stones <5 mm to those >5 mm, nor those <10 mm to those >10 mm. Risk of admission varied from 14% to 19% and the risk of intervention from 12% to 35%. Meta-analysis showed a significantly decreased likelihood of intervention for stones <5 vs >5 mm and <10 vs >10 mm. Studies had variable risk of bias due to heterogeneous reporting of outcome measures with significant likelihood that observed differences in results were compatible with chance alone (Symptoms: I2=0%, Cochran’s Q = 3.09, P = 0.69; Intervention: I2=0%, Cochran’s Q = 1.76, P = 0.88).
Conclusions: the present systematic review indicates that stone size is not a reliable predictor of symptoms; however, risk of intervention is greater for stones >5mm vs <5 mm and >10 vs <10 mm. This review will inform urologists as they discuss management strategies with patients who have asymptomatic renal stones and offer insight to committees during the development of evidence-based guidelines.
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BJU International - 2021 - Lovegrove - Natural history of small asymptomatic kidney and residual stones over a long‐term
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e-pub ahead of print date: 22 June 2021
Additional Information:
Funding Information:
We acknowledge the help of Eli Harriss, a librarian at the Bodleian Health Care Libraries, University of Oxford who helped design the search strategy and perform the systematic literature search. Catherine E. Lovegrove and Robert M. Geraghty are Academic Clinical Fellows supported by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR). Sarah Howles was an NIHR Academic Clinical Lecturer at the time of the review. Ben Turney is supported by the NIHR Oxford Biomedical Research Centre (BRC).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The Authors. BJU International published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of BJU International
Copyright:
Copyright 2021 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
Keywords:
asymptomatic nephrolithiasis, intervention, surveillance, symptoms
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Local EPrints ID: 453374
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/453374
ISSN: 1464-4096
PURE UUID: 1e1e45c2-479c-40e0-878b-31eee216887c
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Date deposited: 13 Jan 2022 18:16
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 12:52
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Contributors
Author:
Catherine E. Lovegrove
Author:
Robert M. Geraghty
Author:
Bingyuan Yang
Author:
Eleanor Brain
Author:
Sarah Howles
Author:
Ben Turney
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