IS THE PROGNOSTIC NUTRITIONAL INDEX A PREDICTOR OF UROLITHIASIS?

Çağrı COŞKUN, Uğur AYDIN, Kayhan TARIM, Engin DEREKÖYLÜ

Journal of Urological Surgery - 2026;13(2):108-113

Kırıkkale Yüksek İhtisas Hospital, Clinic of Urology, Kırıkkale, Türkiye

 

Objective: Prognostic nutritional index (PNI) is a parameter that reflects nutritional status and inflammation. It is calculated from serum albumin and lymphocyte count. Our study investigated whether PNI has a predictive value in urolithiasis. Materials and Methods: Data of patients who applied to Ağrı Training and Research Hospital with renal colic between January 2017 and December 2024 were retrospectively examined. Three hundred forty-eight patients were included in the stone group and 627 patients were included in the control group. Patients' age, gender, smoking, hypertension, and diabetes history, body mass index, hemoglobin level, glomerular filtration rate (GFR), blood urea nitrogen, uric acid levels, sodium, potassium, calcium, white blood cell count (WBC), neutrophil count, lymphocyte count, albumin, neutrophil/lymphocyte ratio (NLR), and PNI levels were compared. Results: No statistically significant difference existed between the demographic data and the patients' comorbidities. In the stone patients group and the control group, mean GFR was 88.04 [standard deviation (SD): 13.21], 93.90 (SD: 13.17); mean WBC was 8910 (SD: 1629), 8268 (SD: 1562); mean neutrophil count was 6040 (SD: 1416), 4933 (SD: 1283); mean lymphocyte count was 2070 (SD: 879), 2535 (SD: 944); mean NLR was 3.62 (SD: 2.1), 2.34 (SD: 1.41); PNI was 30.73 (SD: 6.85), 53.66 (SD: 6.94) (p<0.001, all). Conclusion: PNI value was lower in stone patients than in the control group. PNI may be a parameter predicting stone formation. Additionally, the predictive value can be strengthened with the NLR value.