What can be the best treatment for kidney stone? Many of you might have asked this question before going for a surgery. With the technological advancement, a group of researchers have come up with a technique called Burst Wave Lithotripsy (BWL), which uses ultar sound to burst kidney stones.
Claimed to be an alternative for noninvasive treatment of kidney stones, the study came up in the Journal of Urology, an Official Journal of the American Urological Association (AUA).
With high costs and healthcare burden of kidney stone treatment, BWL provides a promising new approach, according to the report by Jonathan Harper, MD, of University of Washington School of Medicine and colleagues. “New BWL technology successfully fragmented stones of a variety of sizes, locations and densities to under two-millimetre fragments within 10 minutes with negligible tissue injury, the researchers said.
TREATMENTS
Kidney stones are a very common condition. In many cases, the stones pass on their own. In case of not passing on their own, a technique called Extracorporeal Shock Wave Lithotripsy (ESWL), using shock waves is used to break up the stones so that they will be more likely to pass on their own The ESWL procedure is performed in a hospital or clinic, typically with the patient under sedation.
In contrast to the shock waves used in ESWL, the BWL procedure uses “short Farmonic bursts of ultrasound energy – potentially allowing the stones to be broken up in a shorter procedure without the need for sedation or anaesthesia. Pre-clinical studies supported the effectiveness of BW in breaking up experimental stones of varying size and composition.
THE STUDY
Dr. Harper and colleagues performed initial studies in human patients with kidney stones. The patients were undergoing a surgical procedure called ureteroscopy that is used to treat larger stones. Before that treatment, the stones were treated with a short period of BWL- no longer than 10 minutes. Using the ureteroscope, the researchers were able to directly observe how well the ultrasound waves worked in breaking up stones, as well as observing any injury to the kidney tissues.
In the study, BWL was used in 19 patients to target 25 confirmed stones. Overall, a median of 90 per cent of the stone volume was completely broken up within the brief treatment period. Thirty-nine percent of stones were completely fragmented while 52 per cent were partially fragmented.
Most of the stone fragments measured less than two millimetres – small enough that they would be easily able to pass on their own, without much pain. Examination through the ureteroscope showed mild or no tissue injury related to the BWL procedure, consisting mainly of mild bleeding.
For several reasons, BWL could be an important practical advance in the management of kidney stones. Many patients make multiple visits to the emergency department while waiting for definitive treatment of their kidney stones, often requiring opioids for pain management. Some patients require repeated treatment, even after surgery or ESWL. “The ability to noninvasively break stones and expel the fragments in awake patients at first presentation in the ED or clinic has the potential to provide just-in-time treatment leading to a reduction of the overall pain, cost and resource burden associated with a stone event,” the researchers write.
The new results “are a step toward an office-based lithotripsy for awake patients,” Dr. Harper and coauthors conclude. They plan further studies toward determining whether the BWL technique can meet their ultimate goal of a “noninvasive, 30-minute treatment in the clinic without anesthesia.”
The BWL technology was licensed to Sono Motion which is developing a commercial version of the technology and is in the midst of separate clinical trials.