Logo image
Prevalence and risk factors for renal scars in children with febrile UTI and/or VUR: A cross-sectional observational study of 565 consecutive patients
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Prevalence and risk factors for renal scars in children with febrile UTI and/or VUR: A cross-sectional observational study of 565 consecutive patients

Warren T. Snodgrass, Anjana Shah, Mary Yang, Jeannie Kwon, Carlos Villanueva, Janelle Traylor, Karen Pritzker, Paul A. Nakonezny, Robert W. Haley and Nicol Corbin Bush
Journal of pediatric urology, Vol.9(6), pp.856-863
12/01/2013
PMID: 23465483

Abstract

DMSA Focal renal cortical defect Renal scar Technetium-99m dimercaptosuccinic acid renography Urinary tract infection Vesicoureteral reflux
To determine prevalence and risk factors for renal scar in children referred for urologic assessment of febrile UTI and/or VUR. Pre-determined risk factors for renal scar were prospectively recorded in consecutive patients referred for UTI/VUR. Age, gender, VUR grade, and reported number of febrile and non-febrile UTIs were analyzed with logistic regression to determine risk for focal cortical defects on non-acute DMSA. Of 565 consecutive children, 24 (4%) had congenital renal dysplasia and 84 (15.5%) had focal defect(s). VUR, especially grades IV–V, recurrent febrile UTI, and older age increased risk. For any age child with the same number of UTIs, VUR increased odds of renal defect 5.4-fold (OR = 5.4, 95% CI = 2.7–10.6, AUC = 0.759). Focal DMSA defects were present in 15.5% of 565 consecutive children referred for febrile UTI and/or VUR; 4% had presumed congenital reflux nephropathy without cortical defect. All VUR grades increased risk for these defects, as did recurrent febrile UTIs and older age. However, 43% with grades IV–V VUR and 76% with recurrent UTI had normal DMSA.

Metrics

1 Record Views

Details

Logo image