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Metabolic Risk Factors and Stones Composition in Adult Kidney Stone Formers

A

Agnieszka Pozdzik

Status

Completed

Conditions

Kidney Stone

Treatments

Other: Data extraction

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04243772
Metastone study

Details and patient eligibility

About

Within the CHU Brugmann hospital, a multidisciplinary Renal Lithiasis and Mineral Metabolism clinic has been inaugurated in 2017. During the first months of 2018, the activities of the clinic have been focalized on the pre-analytical and analytical aspects of metabolic work-up. 15 patients are followed on average per week. The clinic is recognized as one of the 24 core centers of the European Nephrolithiasis Network and it is the only clinic included in this network in Belgium. The actual practice of the clinic has been published in a survey regarding current practice patterns of stone centers across Europe. Following this publication, the members of the board of the European Nephrolithiasis Network have put as common effort to standardize the care of kidney stone formers and obtained endorsement to perform a second survey in each core center. The aim of this initiative is to share information from real patients in aggregate form. Each core center practice will be evaluated by the second survey by an analysis of the robustness of clinical, biological, urological and radiological data.

The main aim of this project consists in the constitution of a clinical, biological, urological and radiological database of followed patients. This database could be shared in aggregate form by using a specialized coding system for the patients. The database will enable the investigators to:

  • describe the epidemiological and clinico-biological characteristics of the CHU Brugmann patient population
  • gather information about the kidney function outcome
  • analyze and classify identified prolithogenics factors
  • characterize related metabolic disorders (diabetes mellitus, metabolic syndrome, arterial hypertension, chronic kidney diseases, osteoporosis...)
  • identify the patients that could participate in the international trials on kidney stone disease
  • identify the patients that will need a specialized genetic testing.
  • evaluate the impact of the clinic activity and metabolic work-up on the rate of recurrence of kidney stones in the patient population.

The obtained data will be compared with the global data from the European Nephrolithiasis Network.

Full description

Nearly 10% of population suffer from kidney stone disease. Recent review reported that kidney stones represent an underestimated risk factor for further kidney function deterioration, arterial hypertension and cardiovascular diseases. They are furthermore a significant predictor of osteoporotic fractures.

This evidence needs to be very seriously considered in children and adolescent suffering from this disorder. The epidemiological registry data show an alarming, continous increase in the incidence of kidney stones in adults (both sexes) and intriguingly in children. During the last 25 years the incidence of nephrolithiasis in children has increased by approximately 6% to 10% annually and is now 50 per 100 000 adolescents. Stone incidence in children undergoing abdominal imaging more than doubled between 2011 and 2016. Moreover, the changes in stone compositions have been identified and remain relevant pathophysiological aspects in the epidemiology of kidney stones.

Acute nephritic colic access reflects only the end-point of mineral metabolism abnormalities - the kidney stone disease is considered as a chronic, systemic mineral metabolism disorder. The process of kidney stones formation - lithogenesis- is a consequence of imbalance between the promotors and inhibitors in the urine. The patients with kidney stone disease require a complete metabolic assessment.

The three main areas leading to stone formation are metabolism, diet and lifestyle. The main causes of kidney stones are most frequently related to an increase in salt and sugar intake, insufficient water intake and increased incidence of obesity. All this together leads to the supersaturation of several biochemical components excreted physiologically in the urine, resulting in fine in their crystallization, a first step in stone formation.

Metabolic work-up is recommended by the American Urology Association to identify and correct the factors responsible for urinary stone formation such as hypercalciuria, hyperoxaluria, hypocitraturia or abnormalities of urinary pH. The metabolic work-up includes the collection of urine during 24h. This is the most useful test, giving information about the patient's average chemical risk of stone formation and it is the nearest available body fluid to the actual formation and growth of the stone itself. Metabolism is dealt with through a concurrent blood and spot urine test. Diet is handled through a variable method of diary recorded by the patient on his free, home diet. Lifestyle is handled with through a standard questionnaire given by the physician.

Within the CHU Brugmann hospital, a multidisciplinary Renal Lithiasis and Mineral Metabolism clinic has been inaugurated in 2017. During the first months of 2018, the activities of the clinic have been focalized on the pre-analytical and analytical aspects of metabolic work-up. 15 patients are followed on average per week. The clinic is recognized as one of the 24 core centers of the European Nephrolithiasis Network and it is the only clinic included in this network in Belgium. The actual practice of the clinic has been published in a survey regarding current practice patterns of stone centers across Europe. Following this publication, the members of the board of the European Nephrolithiasis Network have put as common effort to standardize the care of kidney stone formers and obtained endorsement to perform a second survey in each core center. The aim of this initiative is to share information from real patients in aggregate form. Each core center practice will be evaluated by the second survey by an analysis of the robustness of clinical, biological, urological and radiological data.

The main aim of this project consists in the constitution of a clinical, biological, urological and radiological database of followed patients. This database could be shared in aggregate form by using a specialized coding system for the patients. The database will enable the investigators to:

  • describe the epidemiological and clinico-biological characteristics of the CHU Brugmann patient population
  • gather information about the kidney function outcome
  • analyze and classify identified prolithogenics factors
  • characterize related metabolic disorders (diabetes mellitus, metabolic syndrome, arterial hypertension, chronic kidney diseases, osteoporosis...)
  • identify the patients that could participate in the international trials on kidney stone disease
  • identify the patients that will need a specialized genetic testing.
  • evaluate the impact of the clinic activity and metabolic work-up on the rate of recurrence of kidney stones in the patient population.

The obtained data will be compared with the global data from the European Nephrolithiasis Network.

Enrollment

350 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Active or past history of kidney stone (newly diagnosed or with relapse)
  • Age and sex matched controls from the hospital

Exclusion criteria

  • None

Trial design

350 participants in 1 patient group

Lithiasic patients
Description:
Lithiasic patients of the CHU Brugmann Hospital
Treatment:
Other: Data extraction

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Mohamed El Mallouli

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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