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. 2002 Jan;140(1):103-9.
doi: 10.1067/mpd.2002.120694.

Antibiotic treatment-induced tubular dysfunction as a risk factor for renal stone formation in cystic fibrosis

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Antibiotic treatment-induced tubular dysfunction as a risk factor for renal stone formation in cystic fibrosis

Hansjosef Böhles et al. J Pediatr. 2002 Jan.

Abstract

Objectives: Our purpose was to characterize the decisive pathophysiologic factors that lead to renal stone formation (nephrolithiasis) in patients with cystic fibrosis (CF).

Methods: Patients with CF (n = 96) were investigated with respect to lithogenic and inhibitory factors of urolithiasis and compared with 30 healthy control patients. They were subdivided into 2 groups, 86 without renal stones and 10 with renal stones.

Results: All stones were exclusively composed of calcium oxalate. As a major pathogenic factor, a urinary disequilibrium between promoting and inhibitory components of stone formation, characterized mainly by hypercalciuria, hyperoxaluria, and hypocitraturia, was found in the patients with nephrolithiasis. They tended to have lower plasma phosphate concentrations and an increased urinary phosphate excretion. The citrate/calcium ratio proved to be a valuable means to discriminate patients with renal stones from control patients. Patients with stones had ingested more cotrimoxazole and ceftazidim, cumulatively, than patients without stones. There was an inverse correlation between the amounts of antibiotics ingested and the percentage of tubular phosphate reabsorption (r = -0.91, P <.0046).

Conclusion: Renal stone formation in patients with CF is caused by a disequilibrium between promoting and inhibitory components of stone formation, which is dominated by hypercalciuria, hyperoxaluria, and hypocitraturia. Treatment with cotrimoxazole and ceftazidim, primarily, may lead to renal proximal tubular damage with an ensuing sequence of phosphate loss, increase of parathyroid hormone secretion, increased 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 formation, and absorptive hypercalciuria.

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