A family history increases the risk of kidney stone passage independent of dietary risk factors. However, the metabolic basis for familial aggregation of urolithiasis is unknown.
We evaluated metabolic risk factors in families with at least two sibs with a history of calcium stones. Sibs underwent outpatient evaluations simultaneously, including 24-hour urine collection and oral calcium loading. Phenotypes were compared between affected and unaffected sibs from the same sibship.
Eighty-three sibships comprising 388 sibs (212 affected sibs, 114 males and 98 females, and 176 unaffected sibs, 68 males and 108 females) from 71 families were analyzed. Daily urine calcium excretion was higher in affected compared with unaffected sibs (0.64 +/- 0.33 vs. 0.50 +/- 0.22 mmol Ca(2+)/mmol creatinine, respectively, P