BMC Urology (Jun 2020)

Guideline-adherence in the treatment of symptomatic urolithiasis in children and adolescents in southwestern Germany

  • Felix Blasl-Kling,
  • Simone Katrin Dold,
  • Jan-Thorsten Klein,
  • Gamal Anton Wakileh,
  • Ulrich Humke,
  • Anne-Karoline Ebert

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12894-020-00643-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1
pp. 1 – 6

Abstract

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Abstract Background Approximately 1% of urolithiasis cases in Germany affect children. Interdisciplinary groups have agreed on national and international guidelines for children to recommend appropriate treatment pathways. The aim of this retrospective and preliminary study is to analyze whether adherence to current guidelines for pediatric stone disease in southwestern Germany is feasible. Methods During 2014 to 2017 24 children and adolescents (nine female, 15 male, median age 9.7 years), were treated for symptomatic urolithiasis in our institutions. We retrospectively collected clinical and operative courses. Clinical pathways were compared to previous guideline recommendations of the EAU 2014 and the German S2k guideline 2015. Results 17 of the 24 patients were treated according to guideline recommendations (71%). Non-adherency was based on parental decisions in two and technical/medical considerations in five cases. In 11 children (45.8%) secondary or adjunctive treatments were necessary, in three of the seven non-adherently treated (43%) and in eight of the 17 adherently treated children (47%). Conclusion Our daily treatment approach seems to comply well with current pediatric stone guidelines. Nevertheless, guideline-non-adherent decision making emphasizes their strength and limitations, as specific clinical situations in children may require an individual treatment plan, as non-predictable conditions may occur.