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Adjudication of Self-reported Symptomatic Stone Recurrence in the Prevention of Urinary Stones With Hydration Trial.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Wessells, H; Lieske, JC; Lai, HH; Al-Khalidi, HR; Desai, AC; Harper, JD; Kirkali, Z; Maalouf, NM; McCune, R; Reese, PP; Scales, CD; Tasian, GE ...
Published in: Urology
September 4, 2024

OBJECTIVE: To assess accuracy of self-reported stone events in a large clinical trial by adjudication against the weight of documentation for spontaneous stone passage or surgical intervention. METHODS: Participants in the Prevention of Urinary Stones with Hydration (PUSH) trial were randomized to a multi-component behavioral intervention or control arm to increase and maintain high fluid intake. The primary endpoint was urinary stone events including symptomatic stone passage or procedural intervention. An independent adjudication committee blinded to randomization assignments reviewed all events. Confirmed clinical stone events required typical stone symptoms and documentation of stone passage (eg, via photograph, clinical record) and/or surgical intervention. Events with typical symptoms and self-described stone passage but without objective documentation of passage were also considered as meeting the primary endpoint and classified separately as patient-reported passage. Non-events did not meet either criteria. RESULTS: At time of this blinded analysis, a total of 1658 participants were randomized and had a median follow-up of 19 months. Self-reported stone events (n = 217) were adjudicated by the committee as either confirmed clinical events (134; 61.8%), patient-reported passage (71; 32.7%), or non-events (12; 5.5%). Confirmed clinical events consisted of stone passage in 66/134 and procedural interventions in 68/134 (53 for symptoms and 15 without symptoms). CONCLUSION: Rigorous adjudication revealed that self-reported stone events in the PUSH trial overwhelmingly represented clinically documented passage, surgical intervention, and patient-reported passage outside healthcare settings, with only 5.5% failing to satisfy adjudication criteria. Similar adjudication and classification processes warrant consideration for implementation in future stone trials. CLINICAL TRIALS REGISTRATION: NCT03244189.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Urology

DOI

EISSN

1527-9995

Publication Date

September 4, 2024

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • Urology & Nephrology
  • 3202 Clinical sciences
  • 1103 Clinical Sciences
 

Citation

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Wessells, H., Lieske, J. C., Lai, H. H., Al-Khalidi, H. R., Desai, A. C., Harper, J. D., … NIDDK Urinary Stone Disease Research Network. (2024). Adjudication of Self-reported Symptomatic Stone Recurrence in the Prevention of Urinary Stones With Hydration Trial. Urology. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.urology.2024.08.026
Wessells, Hunter, John C. Lieske, H Henry Lai, Hussein R. Al-Khalidi, Alana C. Desai, Jonathan D. Harper, Ziya Kirkali, et al. “Adjudication of Self-reported Symptomatic Stone Recurrence in the Prevention of Urinary Stones With Hydration Trial.Urology, September 4, 2024. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.urology.2024.08.026.
Wessells H, Lieske JC, Lai HH, Al-Khalidi HR, Desai AC, Harper JD, et al. Adjudication of Self-reported Symptomatic Stone Recurrence in the Prevention of Urinary Stones With Hydration Trial. Urology. 2024 Sep 4;
Wessells, Hunter, et al. “Adjudication of Self-reported Symptomatic Stone Recurrence in the Prevention of Urinary Stones With Hydration Trial.Urology, Sept. 2024. Pubmed, doi:10.1016/j.urology.2024.08.026.
Wessells H, Lieske JC, Lai HH, Al-Khalidi HR, Desai AC, Harper JD, Kirkali Z, Maalouf NM, McCune R, Reese PP, Scales CD, Tasian GE, NIDDK Urinary Stone Disease Research Network. Adjudication of Self-reported Symptomatic Stone Recurrence in the Prevention of Urinary Stones With Hydration Trial. Urology. 2024 Sep 4;
Journal cover image

Published In

Urology

DOI

EISSN

1527-9995

Publication Date

September 4, 2024

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • Urology & Nephrology
  • 3202 Clinical sciences
  • 1103 Clinical Sciences