Clinical question: Is tamsulosin effective in the management of distal ureteric stones?
Bottom line: Tamsulosin promotes stone passage of ureteric stones that are 5 mm to 10 mm. You would need to treat 5 patients with tamsulosin to cause the expulsion of one such stone. Stones smaller than 5 mm have a high rate of spontaneous passage without any intervention. (LOE = 1b-)
Reference: Furyk JS, Chu K, Banks C et al. Distal ureteric stones and tamsulosin: a double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized, multicenter trial. Ann Emerg Med 2016;67(1):86-95.
Study design: Randomized controlled trial (double-blinded)
Funding source: Foundation
Allocation: Concealed
Setting: Outpatient (primary care)
Synopsis: These authors recruited adult patients who presented to the emergency department with symptoms and imaging consistent with distal ureteric stones. Patients with fever, hypotension, stones larger than 10 mm, or kidney disease were excluded. Using concealed allocation, the investigators randomized the patients to receive either tamsulosin 0.4 mg daily or matching placebo for 28 days or until stone passage. The 2 groups had similar baseline characteristics and analysis was by intention to treat.
The primary outcome was stone expulsion as confirmed by computed tomography (CT) and time to stone expulsion was defined by self-reported passage of stone or 48-hour pain-free period. Compliance to the study medications was poor in both groups, and almost one-fifth of the patients did not have follow-up imaging. Of the approximately 80% of patients in each group who underwent follow-up CT, there was no difference in the percentage of patients with passed stones (87% in the tamsulosin group vs 82% in the placebo group; P = .22). In the subset of patients with larger stones (5 mm -10 mm), the tamsulosin group had a significantly higher rate of stone passage than the placebo group (83% vs 61%; P = .03). There were no significant differences detected in time to stone passage, pain, analgesia requirements, need for urological intervention, or adverse events.
Dr. Kulkarni is an assistant professor of hospital medicine at Northwestern University in Chicago.