Yang Jingyi, Ni Jie, Zhou Yu, Liu Xiaorong
Department of Nephrology, Beijing Children's Hospital, National Center for Children's Health, Capital Medical University, No. 56 Nanlishi Street, Xi Cheng District, Beijing, 100045, China.
Pediatr Nephrol. 2025 Sep 11. doi: 10.1007/s00467-025-06865-4.
The link between obesity, urine metabolic disturbances, and the development of kidney stones in children and adolescents remains controversial.
The objective of this work is to identify the association between BMI, urine metabolic disturbance, and pediatric nephrolithiasis.
PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, Cochrane Library, and Scopus databases were searched from inception to June 30, 2023.
Case-control, cohort, and cross-sectional studies with nephrolithiasis in patients aged 21 years or younger, with the topic of BMI and urine metabolic disruption were included.
Children and adolescents with nephrolithiasis are the participants.
We assessed the quality of the included studies using the AHRQ and NOS assessment, but the heterogeneity of the studies did not allow for data synthesis and meta-analyses.
Hypercalciuria, hypocitraturia, and hyperoxaluria are the most prevalent in pediatric nephrolithiasis. Obese pediatric patients would have different urinary mineral profiles depending on the region, dietary habits, and heritability. Also, we found that children of different ages may have varying risk factors for stones. Increasing fluid intake is a simple and affordable strategy for preventing kidney stones, as recommended for children. Improving poor nutritional habits would aid in the decrease of metabolic variables involved in stone formation.
Obesity alone may not contribute to stone formation in pediatrics, but a combination of metabolic factors, different urinary mineral profiles, and abnormal metabolic status may predispose to stones in children, owing to children tending to undergo rapid changes in growth in a relatively short period, and partly due to different risk factors for stones in different regions. In addition to BMI, other indicators such as %BF (percent body fat) and BRI (body roundness index) may be used to comprehensively assess nutritional status and metabolism in children. Evaluating individual metabolic profiles and promoting increased fluid intake are simple, cost-effective strategies for preventing kidney stones in this population.
CRD4202456817.
肥胖、尿液代谢紊乱与儿童及青少年肾结石形成之间的联系仍存在争议。
本研究旨在确定体重指数(BMI)、尿液代谢紊乱与儿童肾结石之间的关联。
检索了PubMed、Embase、Web of Science、Cochrane图书馆和Scopus数据库,检索时间从建库至2023年6月30日。
纳入年龄在21岁及以下的肾结石患者的病例对照研究、队列研究和横断面研究,主题为BMI与尿液代谢紊乱。
患有肾结石的儿童和青少年为参与者。
我们使用美国医疗保健研究与质量局(AHRQ)和纽卡斯尔-渥太华量表(NOS)评估纳入研究的质量,但研究的异质性不允许进行数据综合和荟萃分析。
高钙尿症、低枸橼酸尿症和高草酸尿症在儿童肾结石中最为常见。肥胖的儿科患者根据地区、饮食习惯和遗传因素会有不同的尿矿物质谱。此外,我们发现不同年龄段的儿童可能有不同的结石危险因素。增加液体摄入量是预防肾结石的一种简单且经济实惠的策略,这也是推荐给儿童的做法。改善不良饮食习惯将有助于减少结石形成所涉及的代谢变量。
单纯肥胖可能不会导致儿科患者结石形成,但代谢因素、不同的尿矿物质谱和异常代谢状态的综合作用可能使儿童易患结石,这是因为儿童在相对较短的时期内生长变化迅速,部分原因也是不同地区结石的危险因素不同。除BMI外,其他指标如体脂百分比(%BF)和身体圆润指数(BRI)可用于综合评估儿童的营养状况和代谢情况。评估个体代谢谱并促进增加液体摄入量是预防该人群肾结石的简单、经济有效的策略。
CRD4202456817。