Objective: To describe sex- and diagnosis-specific comorbidities, outcomes, and secular trends associated with ureteropelvic junction obstruction (UPJO) in a large, real-world population diagnosed with hydronephrosis in infancy.
Materials and methods: We identified all infants ≤1 year old with ≥1 claim in the Optum Clinformatics 2007-2020 nationwide population database and used univariable and multivariable Cox regression analyses to estimate associations of demographic and clinical characteristics of infants with a UPJO diagnosis with surgical status.
Results: Of 22,349 infants with hydronephrosis (1.1% of infants; males-1.4%, females-0.7%), 1722 (7.7%; 7.9%-males, 7.2%-females) had UPJO. Follow-up was ≥1 year in 1198 (70%) and ≥3 years in 555 (32%) cases, and UPJO repair was performed in 542 children (31.5%; 32.3%-males, 29.5%-females); 77.7% within 1 year and 97.3% within 3 years. UPJO repair was associated with prior urinary tract infection (UTI) (hazard ratio (HR) 1.41, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.12-1.76) and South (HR 1.42, 95% CI 1.14-1.78) or Midwest (HR 1.60, 95% CI 1.26-2.04) geographic region but did not change over time.
Conclusion: This population-based study provides a real-world view of postnatally diagnosed hydronephrosis, focusing on UPJO, for which 522 cases (∼1/3) had ≥3 years continuous coverage. UPJO-associated comorbidities were more common in females, and the frequencies of UPJO-associated surgery and comorbidities were higher than in other studies. Other than UTI, no other associated kidney or urinary tract diagnoses were associated with UPJO repair. We identified unique sex- and diagnosis-specific differences in associated comorbidities and interventions in children diagnosed with UPJO in the first year of life.
Published by Elsevier Inc.