Medical therapy to facilitate urinary stone passage: a meta-analysis

Medical therapies to ease urinary-stone passage have been reported, but are not generally used. If effective, such therapies would increase the options for treatment of urinary stones. To assess efficacy, we sought to identify and summarise all randomised controlled trials in which calcium-channel b...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Lancet (British edition) 2006-09, Vol.368 (9542), p.1171-1179
Hauptverfasser: Hollingsworth, John M, Rogers, Mary AM, Kaufman, Samuel R, Bradford, Timothy J, Saint, Sanjay, Wei, John T, Hollenbeck, Brent K
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Medical therapies to ease urinary-stone passage have been reported, but are not generally used. If effective, such therapies would increase the options for treatment of urinary stones. To assess efficacy, we sought to identify and summarise all randomised controlled trials in which calcium-channel blockers or α blockers were used to treat urinary stone disease. We searched MEDLINE, Pre-MEDLINE, CINAHL, and EMBASE, as well as scientific meeting abstracts, up to July, 2005. All randomised controlled trials in which calcium-channel blockers or α blockers were used to treat ureteral stones were eligible for inclusion in our analysis. Data from nine trials (number of patients=693) were pooled. The main outcome was the proportion of patients who passed stones. We calculated the summary estimate of effect associated with medical therapy use using random-effects and fixed-effects models. Patients given calcium-channel blockers or α blockers had a 65% (absolute risk reduction=0·31 95% CI 0·25–0·38) greater likelihood of stone passage than those not given such treatment (pooled risk ratio 1·65; 95% CI 1·45–1·88). The pooled risk ratio for α blockers was 1·54 (1·29–1·85) and for calcium-channel blockers with steroids was 1·90 (1·51–2·40). The proportion of heterogeneity not explained by chance alone was 28%. The number needed to treat was 4. Although a high-quality randomised trial is necessary to confirm its efficacy, our findings suggest that medical therapy is an option for facilitation of urinary-stone passage for patients amenable to conservative management, potentially obviating the need for surgery.
ISSN:0140-6736
1474-547X
DOI:10.1016/S0140-6736(06)69474-9