Journal of Urological Surgery (Sep 2024)
Guy’s, S.T.O.N.E., CROES Nomograms in Percutaneous Nephrolithotomy Can Predict the Stone-Free Rate Similarly: A Retrospective Study of Thousand Patients
Abstract
Objective: To compare the Guy’s, S.T.O.N.E, and CROES nomograms for predicting stone-free status in patients who underwent percutaneous nephrolithotomy for renal stones. Materials and Methods: The data of 1114 patients who underwent percutaneous nephrolithotomy for renal calculi between 11/2008 and 08/2018 in our clinic were retrospectively reviewed. Various parameters evaluated by preoperative computed tomography and the scoring systems of the patients and postoperative stone-free status were compared. Results: Out of 1000 patients who met the study criteria. Gender, body mass index, and stone density were not statistically different between the group with residual stones and the stone-free group. However, stone size, number of renal accesses, duration of fluoroscopy usage, duration of operation, number of stones, and complication rate were significantly higher in the group with residual stones than in the stone-free group. A statistically significant correlation was found between the postoperative stone-free rate and scoring systems. The applicability and preoperative prediction ability of all three systems were evaluated by receiver operating characteristic analysis. The area under the curve (AUC) was detected in the Guy’s, CROES, and S.T.O.N.E scoring system (AUC: 0.642, 0.665, 0.592 respectively). Conclusion: In this study, where the perioperative and postoperative results of 1000 patients were evaluated, we found that all three scoring systems could predict the stone-free rate. “We believe that the use of these scoring systems before surgery can guide surgeons.”
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