4.6 Article

Hospitalization Burden of Patients with Kidney Stones and Metabolic Comorbidities in Spain during the Period 2017-2020

Journal

METABOLITES
Volume 13, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/metabo13040574

Keywords

urolithiasis; metabolic syndrome; epidemiology

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This study aimed to evaluate the trends in hospitalization rates, features, costs, and the influence of metabolic syndrome traits on the prevalence and complications of nephrolithiasis. By analyzing hospitalization records from Spain, it was found that the hospitalization rate for nephrolithiasis remained stable at 56.7 per 100,000 inhabitants during the study period. The mortality rate was higher in elderly patients and was associated with comorbid conditions such as diabetes mellitus and hypertension.
Nephrolithiasis has become an increasing worldwide problem during the last decades. Metabolic syndrome, its components, and related dietary factors have been pointed out as responsible for the increasing incidence. The objective of this study was to evaluate the trends in the hospitalization rates of patients with nephrolithiasis, hospitalization features, costs, and how metabolic syndrome traits influence both the prevalence and complications of lithiasic patients. An observational retrospective study was conducted by analyzing hospitalization records from the minimum basic data set, including all patient hospitalizations in Spain in which nephrolithiasis has been coded as a main diagnosis or as a comorbidity during the period 2017-2020. A total of 106,407 patients were hospitalized and coded for kidney or ureteral lithiasis in this period. The mean age of the patients was 58.28 years (CI95%: 58.18-58.38); 56.8% were male, and the median length of stay was 5.23 days (CI95%: 5.06-5.39). In 56,884 (53.5%) patients, kidney or ureteral lithiasis were coded as the main diagnosis; the rest of the patients were coded mostly as direct complications of kidney or ureteral stones, such as non-pecified renal colic, acute pyelonephritis, or tract urinary infection. The hospitalization rate was 56.7 (CI95%: 56.3-57.01) patients per 100,000 inhabitants, showing neither a significant increasing nor decreasing trend, although it was influenced by the COVID-19 pandemic. The mortality rate was 1.6% (CI95%: 1.5-1.7), which was higher, if lithiasis was coded as a comorbidity (3.4% CI95%: 3.2-3.6). Metabolic syndrome diagnosis component codes increased the association with kidney lithiasis when age was higher, reaching the highest in the eighth decade of life. Age, diabetes, and hypertension or lithiasis coded as a comorbidity were the most common causes associated with the mortality of lithiasic patients. In Spain, the hospitalization rate of kidney lithiasis has remained stable during the period of study. The mortality rate in lithiasic patients is higher in elderly patients, being associated with urinary tract infections. Comorbidity conditions such as diabetes mellitus and hypertension are mortality predictors.

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