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Oral Antibiotics Linked to Increase in Kidney Stones Risk

by Anjali Aryamvally on May 11, 2018 at 5:13 PM
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Highlights:

For the first time, it was found that children and adults treated with some oral antibiotics had a significantly higher risk of developing kidney stones. The risk was more strongly observed in children as they are prescribed antibiotics at much higher rates than adults. The study is published in the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology.

Kidney stones

Kidney stones are hard mineral and salt deposits that form inside your kidneys. They can affect any part of your urinary tract from the kidneys to the bladder. Kidney stones are often manageable and easy to treat, if identified early. While these are common in adults, the occurrence in children was previously rare. However, now there seems to be a rise in the prevalence of kidney stones among children.


"The overall prevalence of kidney stones has risen by 70 percent over the past 30 years, with particularly sharp increases among adolescents and young women," said study leader Gregory E. Tasian, MD, MSCE, a pediatric urologist at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP).

‘Children and adults treated with some oral antibiotics are at increased risk for developing kidney stones.’

Co-author Michelle Denburg, MD, MSCE, a pediatric nephrologist at CHOP, added, "The reasons for the increase are unknown, but our findings suggest that oral antibiotics play a role, especially given that children are prescribed antibiotics at higher rates than adults."

Study overview

Data was collected from the electronic health records from the United Kingdom. The study included 13 million adults and children seen by general practitioners in the Health Improvement Network between 1994 and 2015. The research team analyzed prior antibiotic exposure for nearly 26,000 patients with kidney stones, and nearly 260,000 control subjects.

Study findings

Five classes of oral antibiotics were associated with a diagnosis of kidney stones; these were: oral sulfas, cephalosporins, fluoroquinolones, nitrofurantoin, and broad-spectrum penicillins.

"Our findings suggest that antibiotic prescription practices represent a modifiable risk factor-a change in prescribing patterns might decrease the current epidemic of kidney stones in children," Tasian said.

Reference:

  1. Gregory E. Tasian1, Thomas Jemielita, David S. Goldfarb, Lawrence Copelovitch, Jeffrey S. Gerber, Qufei Wu and Michelle R. Denburg "Oral Antibiotic Exposure and Kidney Stone Disease" Journal of the American Society of Nephrology (2018), doi: 10.1681/ASN.2017111213

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