Specialist Care, Metabolic Testing, and Testing Completeness Among U.S. Veterans with Urinary Stone Disease.

Recent observational studies reporting a lack of benefit from 24-hour urine testing for urinary stone disease (USD) prevention assumed testing included all components recommended from clinical guidelines. We sought to assess the completeness of 24-hour urine testing in the VA population.

From the VHA Corporate Data Warehouse (2012-2019), we identified patients with USD (n=198,621) and determined those who saw a urologist and/or nephrologist, and received 24-hour urine testing within 12 months of their index USD encounter. Through Logical Observation Identifiers Names and Codes, we evaluated each collection's completeness, defined as including all of urine volume, calcium, oxalate, citrate, uric acid, and creatinine. We then fit a multilevel logistic regression model with random effects for VHA facility to evaluate factors associated with specialist follow-up, testing, and testing completeness.

Specialist follow-up occurred in 54.3% and was stable over time. Testing occurred in 8.4%, declining from 9.3% in 2012 to 7.2% in 2019. Of tests performed, 54.6% were complete (43.7% increasing to 62.7% from 2012-2019). In adjusted analysis, there was high between-facility variation in specialist follow-up (median OR 2.0; 95% CI 1.7-2.0), testing (median OR 2.2, 95% CI 1.9-2.4), and testing completeness (median OR, 6.0, 95% CI 4.5-7.3). Individual facilities contributed 52% (intraclass correlation coefficient, 0.52; 95% CI, 0.44-0.57) towards the observed variation in testing completeness.

Approximately 1 in 12 U.S. Veterans with USD receive metabolic testing and half of these tests are complete. Addressing facility level variation in testing completeness may improve USD care.

Urology practice. 2022 Oct 13 [Epub]

Ryan S Hsi, Autumn N Valicevic, Sanjeevkumar R Patel, Mary K Oerline, Alan C Pao, John T Leppert, John M Hollingsworth, Vahakn Shahinian

Department of Urology, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee., Department of Internal Medicine, Veterans Administration, Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Ann Arbor, Michigan., Nephrology Division of Internal Medicine, University of Michigan School of Medicine, Ann Arbor, Michigan., Dow Division of Health Services Research, Department of Urology, University of Michigan., Division of Nephrology, Department of Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California.