| Literature DB >> 27021350 |
Mehmet Özsoy1, Evangelos Liatsikos2, Nicolas Scheffbuch3, Panagiotis Kallidonis2.
Abstract
This study aimed at comparing the success rates of silodosin to the most commonly used for medical expulsive therapy (MET) tamsulosin for the management of ureteral stones. A systematic review using the search string: "silodosin AND (ston* OR calcu* OR expul*)" was conducted on Pubmed, SCOPUS, Web of Science, Cochrane Central Register. The Primary endpoint was the stone expulsion rate. Secondary endpoint was the time to stone expulsion. Two authors independently screened the studies depending on inclusion and exclusion criteria. Meta-analysis and forest-plot figures were calculated with the software Review Manager (RevMan 5.3.5). Variations were evaluated with the χ 2 statistical method and heterogeneity with I 2 index. After screening of 39 publications obtained by the initial search, three randomized controlled trials were eligible to be included in the meta-analysis. 407 patients were pooled. Favorable results were observed for silodosin in terms of stone expulsion rates with a risk ratio of 1.33 (95 % CI 1.17-1.50) (I 2 = 0 %). Similarly, faster stone expulsion times were observed with silodosin when compared with tamsulosin. Mean difference -2.49 (95 % CI -3.40 to 1.58) (I 2 = 89 %). This meta-analysis showed significantly higher stone expulsion rates and faster expulsion times in favor of silodosin when compared to tamsulosin.Entities:
Keywords: Medical expulsive therapy (MET); Meta-analysis; Silodosin; Systematic review; Tamsulosin; Ureteral stones
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27021350 PMCID: PMC5063919 DOI: 10.1007/s00240-016-0872-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Urolithiasis ISSN: 2194-7228 Impact factor: 3.436
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Inclusion criteria |
| Ureteral stones |
| RCTs and MET |
| Comparison silodosin vs tamsulosin |
| Follow-up at least 14 days |
| Exclusion criteria |
| Kidney and bladder stones |
| Asymmetrical co-interventions (i.e. swl, JJ stent) |
| No comparison arm |
| Abstracts |
| Animal studies |
| Follow-up <14 days |
Fig. 1Study design
Study characteristics
| Study | Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria | Stone location | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study characteristics | |||||||||||
| Dell’Atti [ | Single lower ureteral stone, 4–10 mm, 18 years or older | Patients with severe hydronephrosis, urinary tract infection, fever, bilateral ureteral stones, solitary kidney, extra stone in the upper urinary system, previous surgical history on the ipsilateral ureter, pregnancy and/or chronic diseases | Lower ureteral | ||||||||
| Kumar [ | >18 years, stone size 5–10 mm, diagnosed via NCCT or KUB, no pain after 1 day | Fever, hydronephrosis, acute or chronic renal insufficiency, multiple ureteral stones, open surgery or endoscopic interventions, diabetes, peptic ulcers, beta-blocker treatment, pregnancy, patients who demanded immediate intervention | Distal ureteral | ||||||||
| Gupta [ | unilateral, non-impacted, uncomplicated middle or lower ureteral stones ≤10 mm | Not mentioned | Middle or lower ureteral | ||||||||
Side effects
| Type of MET | Study | Study | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dell’Atti [ | Dell’Atti [ |
| Kumar [ | Kumar [ |
| |
| Silodosin | Tamsulosin | Silodosin | Tamsulosin | |||
| Side effects | ||||||
| Retrograde ejaculation | 22.7 % (10/44) | 10.2 % (4/39) | <0.00 | 15.6 (10/64) | 11.2 (7/62) | ns |
| Orthostatic hypotension | 3 % (2/66) | 1.5 % (1/67) | ns | 3.3 % | 6.6 % | ns |
| Headache | 1.5 % (1/66) | 1.5 % (1/67) | ns | 12.2 % | 10.0 % | ns |
| Dizziness | 6 % (4/66) | 4.5 % (3/67) | ns | 8.8 % | 10 % | ns |
ns not-significant
Fig. 2Forest plot analysis