Abstract

Previous studies of pediatric urolithiasis have suggested possible associations between the relative proportions of calcium oxalate dihydrate (COD) and calcium oxalate monohydrate (COM) stones with age, gender, and ethnicity. This study aimed to investigate the composition and distribution of calcium oxalate stones according to these clinical factors and the metabolic correlates of the different subtypes in pediatric stone formers. We retrospectively reviewed the database of all first-time stone formers between 2014 and 2019. Infrared spectrometry was used to determine stone composition. Stones were categorized by their highest relative component and reported as a percentage of occurrences in the cohort as a whole and by patient gender, age (divided into three age groups: 1-5, 6-12, 13-18 years), and ethnicity. Clinical and metabolic correlates were analyzed. Of 2,479 consecutive stones submitted to our chemical stone lab, 220 first-time pediatric stone formers were identified. COD stones were the predominant subtype in the youngest group, and COM stones in the oldest group (OR 0.39, 95% CI:0.18-0.86, p=0.036). In the intermediate-age group (6-12 years), COM stones were more prevalent in Arab boys and COD stones in girls of either ethnicity. COD stones were associated with hypercalciuria (p< 0.0001), and COM stones with hyperoxaluria (p=0.0024). Hypercalciuria and hypocitraturia were the most prevalent abnormalities at ages 1-5 and 13-18, respectively. Analysis of calcium oxalate stone subtypes and their metabolic correlates in stone formers has significant clinical relevance, specifically in children. In the present study, COD stones and hypercalciuria were more common in younger children, and COM stones and hypocitraturia in adolescents. These findings suggest unique, complex interactions driving stone formations in children that may guide a more practical, limited, and cost-effective approach to metabolic evaluations, choice of treatment, and preventive measures, particularly in first-time calcium oxalate pediatric stone-formers.

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