| Literature DB >> 27233621 |
Diandong Yang1, Jitao Wu1, Hejia Yuan1, Yuanshan Cui2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To evaluate the efficacy and safety of silodosin as a medical expulsive therapy for ureteral stones by means of a systematic review and meta-analysis.Entities:
Keywords: Meta-analysis; Randomized controlled trial; Silodosin; Ureteral stones
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27233621 PMCID: PMC4882785 DOI: 10.1186/s12894-016-0141-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Urol ISSN: 1471-2490 Impact factor: 2.264
Fig. 1A flow diagram of the study selection process. RCT: randomized controlled trial
Study and patient characteristics
| Study | Therapy in experimental group | Therapy in control group | Country | Sample size | Administration method | Duration of treatment | Dosage | Stone location and size range | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| experimental | Control | ||||||||
| Itoh Y 2011 | silodosin | blank control | Japan | 95 | 92 | Oral | 8 wk | 8mg/d | symptomatic unilateral ureteral calculi of less than 10 mm |
| Tsuzaka Y 2011 | silodosin | naftopidil | Japan | 35 | 39 | Oral | 6 wk | 8mg/d | symptomatic≤10 mm ureteral stones |
| Guptas S 2013 | silodosin | tamsulosin | India | 50 | 50 | Oral | 4 wk | 8mg/d | unilateral, uncomplicated middle or lower ureteral stones ≤10 mm |
| Dell'Atti L 2014 | silodosin | tamsulosin | Italy | 68 | 68 | Oral | 3 wk | 8mg/d | single, unilateral, radiopaque, proximal ureteral stone (range 4–10 mm in size) |
| Sur RL 2014 | silodosin | placebo | USA | 119 | 120 | Oral | 4 wk | 8mg/d | unilateral ureteral calculus of 4–10 mm |
| Kumar S 2015 | silodosin | tamsulosin | India | 90 | 90 | Oral | 4 wk | 8mg/d | distal ureteric stones of size 5–10 mm |
Quality assessment of individual study
| Study | Allocation sequence generation | Allocation concealment | Blinding | Loss to follow-up | Calculation of sample size | Statistical analysis | Level of quality | Jadad Score(5-point) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Itoh Y 2011 | B | B | A | 6 | NO | Student’s t-test | B | 3 |
| Tsuzaka Y 2011 | B | B | A | 10 | NO | Student’s t-test | B | 3 |
| Guptas S 2013 | A | B | A | 0 | NO | Student’s t-test | A | 4 |
| Dell'Atti L 2014 | B | A | A | 3 | YES | Student’s t-test | A | 4 |
| Sur RL 2014 | A | A | A | 6 | YES | Wilcoxon test | A | 5 |
| Kumar S 2015 | A | A | A | 6 | YES | chi-square test | A | 5 |
A - all quality criteria met (adequate): low risk of bias. B - one or more of the quality criteria only partly met (unclear): moderate risk of bias
C - one or more criteria not met (inadequate or not used): high risk of bias
Fig. 2Funnel plot of the studies represented in our meta-analysis. OR: odds ratio, SE: standard error
Fig. 3Forest plots showing changes in (a) the stone expulsion rate, (b) stone expulsion time and (c) analgesics were required. MH: mantel haenszel, CI: confidence interval, SD: standard deviation, IV: inverse variance
Fig. 4Forest plots showing changes in abnormal ejaculation. MH: mantel haenszel, CI: confidence interval
Fig. 5Forest plots showing changes in the stone expulsion rate. MH: mantel haenszel, CI: confidence interval (Subgroup analysis results)
Fig. 6Forest plots showing changes in the stone expulsion rate. MH: mantel haenszel, CI: confidence interval (Subgroup analysis results)