Association of serum bicarbonate with the development of kidney stones in patients with chronic kidney disease: a retrospective cohort study

Author:

Tangri Navdeep1,Mathur Vandana2ORCID,Reaven Nancy L3,Funk Susan E3,Whitlock Reid H4ORCID,Wesson Donald E56,Bushinsky David A7

Affiliation:

1. Department of Internal Medicine, Max Rady College of Medicine, Rady Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Manitoba ; Winnipeg, Manitoba , Canada

2. MathurConsulting LLC , Woodside, CA , USA

3. Strategic Health Resources , La Canada, CA , USA

4. Seven Oaks Hospital Chronic Disease Innovation Centre ; Winnipeg, Manitoba , Canada

5. Dell Medical School, The University of Texas , TX , USA

6. at Austin, Austin, TX, USA; Donald E Wesson Consulting, LLC , TX , USA

7. University of Rochester School of Medicine , Rochester, NY , USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT Background Epidemiological studies demonstrate an association between kidney stones and risk of chronic kidney disease (CKD) and CKD progression. Metabolic acidosis, as a consequence of CKD, results in a reduced urine pH which promotes the formation of some types of kidney stones and inhibits the formation of others. While metabolic acidosis is a risk factor for CKD progression, the association of serum bicarbonate with risk of incident kidney stones is not well understood. Methods We used an Integrated Claims-Clinical dataset of US patients to generate a cohort of patients with non-dialysis-dependent CKD with two serum bicarbonate values of 12 to <22 mmol/L (metabolic acidosis) or 22 to <30 mmol/L (normal serum bicarbonate). Primary exposure variables were baseline serum bicarbonate and change in serum bicarbonate over time. Cox proportional hazards models evaluated time to first occurrence of kidney stones during a median 3.2-year follow-up. Results A total of 142 884 patients qualified for the study cohort. Patients with metabolic acidosis experienced post–index date kidney stones at greater frequency than patients with normal serum bicarbonate at the index date (12.0% vs 9.5%, P < .0001). Both lower baseline serum bicarbonate [hazard ratio (HR) 1.047; 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.036–1.057] and decreasing serum bicarbonate over time (HR 1.034; 95% CI 1.026–1.043) were associated with increased risk of kidney stone development. Conclusions Metabolic acidosis was associated with a higher incidence of kidney stones and shorter time to incident stone formation in patients with CKD. Future studies may investigate the role of correcting metabolic acidosis to prevent stone formation.

Funder

Tricida, Inc.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Transplantation,Nephrology

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