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Conservative Management of Staghorn Stones

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Specialty General Surgery
Date 2020 Jan 11
PMID 31918554
Citations 3
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Abstract

Introduction: Since the seminal works by Singh and Blandy in the 1970s, the management of staghorn stones has almost exclusively involved surgical intervention. In contrast, a more recent study found that conservative management was not as unsafe as previously believed. The present review sought to examine the available literature to understand the implications of a conservative strategy.

Methods: A systematic search of the literature was carried out using MEDLINE, Embase™ and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials. All papers looking at management of staghorn calculi were reviewed and studies with a conservative management arm were identified. Outcomes of interest were recurrent or severe urinary tract infections, progressive renal deterioration, dialysis requirements, morbidity and disease specific mortality. Owing to the lack of relevant data, a descriptive review was carried out.

Results: Our literature search yielded 10 suitable studies involving a total of 304 patients with staghorn stones managed conservatively. Progressive renal deterioration occurred in 0-100% of cases (mean 27.5%) with a higher rate among bilateral staghorn sufferers (44% vs 9%). Dialysis was required in 9% of patients (20% bilateral, 6% unilateral). The mean rate of severe infection was 8.7% and recurrent urinary tract infections occurred in as high as 50% of cases (80% bilateral, 41% unilateral). Disease specific mortality ranged from 0% to 67% (mean 20.5%).

Conclusions: It appears that conservative management of staghorn calculi is not as unsafe as previously thought and selection of patients with unilateral asymptomatic stones with minimal infection should be considered.

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International Alliance of Urolithiasis (IAU) guideline on staghorn calculi management.

Zhong W, Osther P, Pearle M, Choong S, Mazzon G, Zhu W World J Urol. 2024; 42(1):189.

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Retrograde intrarenal surgery with intelligent control of renal pelvic pressure for staghorn calculi: a case report.

He X, Huang X, Zhai Q, Song L, Deng X Front Med (Lausanne). 2024; 11:1321184.

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Management of large kidney stones in the geriatric population.

Schulz A, Green B, Gupta K, Patel R, Loloi J, Raskolnikov D World J Urol. 2023; 41(4):981-992.

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