Section of Nephrology, Department of Medicine, Università degli Studi di Verona, Verona, Italy.
Channing Division of Network Medicine, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts; Division of Nephrology and Transplantation, Maine Medical Center, Portland, Maine.
Am J Kidney Dis. 2024 Aug;84(2):164-169. doi: 10.1053/j.ajkd.2024.02.010. Epub 2024 Apr 5.
RATIONALE & OBJECTIVE: Most previous studies of the relationship between urinary factors and kidney stone risk have either assumed a linear effect of urinary parameters on kidney stone risk or implemented arbitrary thresholds suggesting biologically implausible "all-or-nothing" effects. In addition, little is known about the hierarchy of effects of urinary factors on kidney stone risk. This study evaluated the independent associations between urine chemistries and kidney stone formation and examined their magnitude and shape.
Prospective cohort study.
SETTING & PARTICIPANTS: We analyzed 9,045 24-hour urine collections from 6,217 participants of the Health Professionals Follow-Up Study and Nurses' Health Studies I and II.
Urine volume and pH, and concentrations of calcium, citrate, oxalate, potassium, magnesium, uric acid, phosphorus, and sodium.
Incident symptomatic kidney stones.
Multivariable logistic regression analysis incorporating restricted cubic splines to explore potentially nonlinear relationships between urinary factors and the risk of forming a kidney stone. Optimal inflection point analysis was implemented for each factor, and dominance analysis was performed to establish the relative importance of each urinary factor.
Each urinary factor was significantly associated with stone formation except for urine pH. Higher urinary levels of calcium, oxalate, phosphorus, and sodium were associated with a higher risk of stone formation whereas higher urine volume, uric acid, citrate, potassium, and magnesium were associated with a lower risk. The relationships were substantially linear for urine calcium, uric acid, and sodium. By contrast, the magnitudes of the relationships were modestly attenuated at levels above the inflection points for urine oxalate, citrate, volume, phosphorus, potassium, and magnesium. Dominance analysis identified 3 categories of factors' relative importance: higher (calcium, volume, and citrate), intermediate (oxalate, potassium, and magnesium), and lower (uric acid, phosphorus, and sodium).
Predominantly White participants, lack of information on stone composition.
Urine chemistries have complex relationships and differential relative associations with the risk of kidney stone formation.
PLAIN-LANGUAGE SUMMARY: Kidney stones are common and likely to recur. Certain urinary factors play a role in the development of stones, but their independent roles, relative importance, and shapes of association with stone formation are not well-characterized. We analyzed 24-hour urine collections from individuals with and without kidney stones. Stones were less likely in those with higher urine volume, citrate, potassium, magnesium, and uric acid and were more likely in those with higher calcium, oxalate, phosphorus, and sodium. The acidity of the urine was not related to stones. The urinary parameters showed different degrees of relative importance, with calcium, volume, and citrate being greatest. All parameters exhibited a linear or close-to-linear shape of association with stone formation.
大多数先前关于尿因素与肾结石风险之间关系的研究要么假设尿参数对肾结石风险的影响呈线性,要么实施任意阈值,暗示生物学上不合理的“全有或全无”效应。此外,人们对尿因素对肾结石风险的影响层次知之甚少。本研究评估了尿液化学物质与肾结石形成之间的独立关联,并探讨了它们的大小和形状。
前瞻性队列研究。
我们分析了来自健康专业人员随访研究和护士健康研究 I 和 II 的 6217 名参与者的 9045 份 24 小时尿液样本。
尿容量和 pH 值,以及钙、柠檬酸盐、草酸盐、钾、镁、尿酸、磷和钠的浓度。
新发性有症状肾结石。
多变量逻辑回归分析结合限制立方样条,以探讨尿因素与形成肾结石风险之间潜在的非线性关系。对每个因素实施最佳拐点分析,并进行优势分析以确定每个尿因素的相对重要性。
除尿 pH 值外,每个尿因素与结石形成均显著相关。较高的尿钙、草酸盐、磷和钠水平与结石形成风险增加相关,而较高的尿容量、尿酸、柠檬酸盐、钾和镁水平与结石形成风险降低相关。钙、尿酸和钠的关系基本呈线性。相比之下,在草酸盐、柠檬酸盐、容量、磷、钾和镁的拐点以上,这些关系的幅度适度减弱。优势分析确定了因素相对重要性的 3 个类别:较高(钙、容量和柠檬酸盐)、中等(草酸盐、钾和镁)和较低(尿酸、磷和钠)。
主要为白人参与者,缺乏结石成分信息。
尿液化学物质与肾结石形成风险之间存在复杂的关系和不同的相对关联。