| Literature DB >> 29696300 |
Sacha L Moore1, Bhaskar K Somani2,3, Paul Cook4.
Abstract
There is a lack of studies looking at the longitudinal follow-up of patients with cystine stones. We wanted to assess the journey of cystinuric patients through our specialist metabolic stone clinic to improve the understanding of episodes, interventions and current outcomes in this patient cohort. After ethical approval, all patients who attended our metabolic stone clinic from 1994 to 2014 with at least one cystine stone episode were included in our study. Data were retrospectively analysed for patient demographics, stone episodes or intervention, clinical parameters and patient compliance. Over a period of 21 years, 16 patients with a median age of 15.5 years underwent a mean follow-up of 8.6 years (1-21 years). The mean number of surgical interventions was 3.1 (1-8/patient), but patients who were stone free after their first treatment had lower recurrences (p = 0.91) and lower number of interventions during their follow-up (2.7/patient, compared to those who were not stone free at 4/patient). During their follow-up period, patients with < 3 interventions had a significantly better renal function than those with ≥ 3 surgical interventions (p = 0.04). Additionally, linear regression analysis showed that eGFR was demonstrated to decline with increasing numbers of stone episodes (r2 = 0.169). It was also noted that patients who began early medical management remained stone free during follow-up compared to those who had medical management after ≥ 2 stone episodes, of whom all had a recurrent episode. Our long-term longitudinal study of cystine stone formers highlights that patients who are stone free and receive early metabolic stone screening and medical management after their initial presentation have the lowest recurrence rates and tend to preserve their renal function. Hence, prompt referral for metabolic assessment, and the stone and fragments entirely removed (SaFER) principles are key to preventing stone episodes and improving long-term function.Entities:
Keywords: Cystine; Prevention; Recurrence; Stone; Ureteroscopy; Urolithiasis
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29696300 PMCID: PMC6420894 DOI: 10.1007/s00240-018-1059-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Urolithiasis ISSN: 2194-7228 Impact factor: 3.436
Fig. 1Age at diagnosis of cystine stones
Fig. 2Frequency of presenting complaints
Fig. 3Journey of cystinuria patients
Fig. 4Stone interventions and recurrences based on their initial stone free stats
Fig. 5Number of stone episodes and renal function
Shows the difference in stone recurrences between patients who had early versus late metabolic prophylaxis
| Number of patients with recurrence | Number of patients without recurrence | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Group III (metabolic prophylaxis after first stone treatment) | 0 | 4 (25%) | < 0.05 |
| Group IV (seen after ≥ 2 stone episodes and metabolic prophylaxis after that) | 12 (75%) | 0 | < 0.05 |