Determinants of Treatment Pathway in Renal Colic: A Size-Stratified Analysis from the Emergency Department of a Tertiary Center
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Introduction Acute flank pain due to ureteral calculi is a common presentation in emergency departments (EDs). Decisions between conservative management and inpatient intervention remain difficult in the absence of absolute indications. This study aims to identify size-stratified predictors to assist ED decision-making in ureterolithiasis. Materials and Methods This was a single-center retrospective study of patients presenting in the ED of a tertiary center with acute ureteral colic between October 2020 and November 2024. A total of 752 patients with CT-confirmed ureteral stones were included and analyzed. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis identified a 5.65-mm threshold; operationalized as 6 mm in the subsequent analyses. After size-based stratification, uni- and multivariate regression analyses were conducted to identify predictors for inpatient admission in the <6mm subgroup and predictors for discharge in the ≥6mm subgroup, respectively. Results Overall, 77% of 1,194 patients were discharged and managed conservatively, and 23% underwent inpatient intervention. In the <6 mm subgroup (n=514; 20% intervened), multivariable analysis identified larger stone diameter (OR 1.65 per mm; p=0.021, lower eGFR(OR 0.95 per mL/min; p=0.002) and younger age (OR 0.96 per year; p=0.024) as independent predictors for intervention. In the ≥6 mmsubgroup (n=238; 45% discharged), a distal location was the only independent predictor of discharge (OR 5.33; p=0.045). Conclusion A pragmatic 6-mmthreshold, complemented by basic presentation markers, refines ED management beyond size alone. For stones <6 mm, greater diameter and reduced renal function independently signaled the need for inpatient intervention, whereas age was inversely associated. For stones ≥6 mm, predominantly distal location favored discharge.