Pharmacotherapy for patients with calcium oxalate stones and abnormal urine chemistry: A systematic review and meta-analysis for the Japanese Clinical Practice Guidelines for the Management of Urinary Stones, Third Edition
Pharmacotherapy for patients with calcium oxalate stones and abnormal urine chemistry: A systematic review and meta-analysis for the Japanese Clinical Practice Guidelines for the Management of Urinary Stones, Third Edition
Kohjimoto et al., 2025 | Int J Urol | Meta Analysis
Citation
Kohjimoto Yasuo, Iba Akinori, ... Hara Isao. Pharmacotherapy for patients with calcium oxalate stones and abnormal urine chemistry: A systematic review and meta-analysis for the Japanese Clinical Practice Guidelines for the Management of Urinary Stones, Third Edition. Int J Urol. 2025-Jan;32(1):16-28. doi:10.1111/iju.15608
Abstract
We performed a systematic review and meta-analysis to evaluate the benefits and harms of pharmacotherapies for patients with calcium oxalate stones and abnormal urine chemistry. This article is a modified and detailed version of the commentary on Clinical Question 10 described in the Japanese Clinical Practice Guidelines for the Management of Urinary Stones, Third Edition. PubMed and Ichushi Web were searched through August 2020 for articles on pharmacotherapies for calcium oxalate stones (thiazides, citrate preparations, uric acid production inhibitors, and magnesium preparations). Two reviewers independently selected randomized controlled trials reporting reduction of stone recurrence and adverse drug reactions as outcomes and performed data extraction and quality assessment. Meta-analyses with random effects models and rating of the strength of evidence were performed. Pharmacotherapies were shown to significantly reduce stone recurrence (risk ratio 0.47, 95% confidence interval 0.35-0.63). Meanwhile, the pharmacotherapies increased adverse drug reactions leading to study dropout (risk ratio 2.51, 95% confidence interval 1.09-5.75) and adverse drug reactions/adverse events (risk ratio 1.95, 95% confidence interval 1.07-3.56). The reported adverse drug reactions were, however, mainly minor and did not frequently require discontinuation of medication (2%-16%). The strengths of evidence for both outcomes were rated as moderate, because the risk of bias, indirectness, inconsistency, imprecision, and publication bias were all serious except for one item. The overall strength of evidence across outcomes was therefore determined to be moderate. These results support the conditional recommendation to initiate pharmacotherapies for patients with calcium oxalate stones and abnormal urine chemistry.
Key Findings
These results support the conditional recommendation to initiate pharmacotherapies for patients with calcium oxalate stones and abnormal urine chemistry.
Outcomes Measured
- Requires manual extraction
Population
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Population | calcium oxalate stones and |
| Sample Size | See abstract |
| Age Range | See abstract |
| Condition | See abstract |
MeSH Terms
- Humans
- Calcium Oxalate
- Japan
- Practice Guidelines as Topic
- Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
- Recurrence
- Thiazides
- Urinary Calculi
Evidence Classification
- Level: Meta Analysis
- Publication Types: Journal Article, Meta-Analysis, Systematic Review
- Vertical: calcium
Provenance
- PMID: 39415439
- DOI: 10.1111/iju.15608
- PMCID: Not in PMC
- Verified: 2026-04-09 via PubMed E-utilities API
Source extracted via PubMed E-utilities API on 2026-04-09