Harb Amro A, Han David S, Lee Justin A, Schulster Michael L, Shah Ojas
Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, NY, USA.
Department of Urology, Columbia University Irving Medical Center, 161 Fort Washington Avenue, 11th Floor, New York, NY, 10032, USA.
Urolithiasis. 2023 Mar 28;51(1):59. doi: 10.1007/s00240-023-01432-8.
Urinary stone disease is common and affects approximately 10% of the American adults. The role of diet in stone formation is well-recognized; however, the literature focus has been on dietary excess rather than micronutrient inadequacy. As patients with stones may be at risk for nutrient inadequacies, we investigated the role of micronutrient inadequacy in stone formation by performing a cross-sectional analysis of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey on adults who were not taking dietary supplements. Micronutrient intake was obtained from 24-h dietary recalls, and usual intake was calculated. Survey-weighted, adjusted logistic regression was used for an incident analysis on having any history of stones. An additional analysis on recurrent stone-formers was performed with the outcome being 2 or more stones passed. Finally, a sensitivity analysis using quasi-Poisson regression was performed with the outcome being number of stones passed. There were 9777 respondents representing 81,087,345 adults, of which 9.36% had a stone history. Our incident analysis revealed inadequate vitamin A intake to be associated with stone formation (OR 1.33, 95% CI: 1.03-1.71). Recurrent analysis did not find any significant associations, while our sensitivity analysis revealed inadequate vitamin A (IRR 1.96, 95% CI: 1.28-3.00) and pyridoxine (IRR 1.99, 95% CI: 1.11-3.55) to be associated with a higher number of recurrent stones. Hence, inadequate dietary intake of vitamin A and pyridoxine was associated with nephrolithiasis. Further research is needed to identify the roles of these micronutrients in stone-formers and the potential for evaluation and treatment.
尿路结石病很常见,约10%的美国成年人受其影响。饮食在结石形成中的作用已得到充分认识;然而,文献关注的重点一直是饮食过量而非微量营养素不足。由于结石患者可能存在营养素不足的风险,我们通过对未服用膳食补充剂的成年人进行全国健康和营养检查调查的横断面分析,研究了微量营养素不足在结石形成中的作用。微量营养素摄入量通过24小时饮食回顾获得,并计算通常摄入量。采用调查加权的调整逻辑回归对有任何结石病史进行事件分析。对复发性结石形成者进行了额外分析,结果为排出2颗或更多结石。最后,采用准泊松回归进行敏感性分析,结果为排出结石的数量。有9777名受访者,代表81087345名成年人,其中9.36%有结石病史。我们的事件分析显示维生素A摄入不足与结石形成有关(比值比1.33,95%可信区间:1.03 - 1.71)。复发性分析未发现任何显著关联,而我们的敏感性分析显示维生素A(发病率比值比1.96,95%可信区间:1.28 - 3.00)和吡哆醇(发病率比值比1.99,95%可信区间:1.11 - 3.55)与复发性结石数量较多有关。因此,维生素A和吡哆醇的膳食摄入不足与肾结石有关。需要进一步研究以确定这些微量营养素在结石形成者中的作用以及评估和治疗的潜力。