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. 2020 Mar 12;105(6):1937–1946. doi: 10.1210/clinem/dgaa123

Table 5.

Association between urinary sodium and calcium excretion and incident kidney stones

HPFS NHS I NHS II
Urinary Sodium Excretion (mEq/day) Mean Adjusted Urinary Calcium Excretion (mg/day) RR (95% CI) Mean Adjusted Urinary Calcium Excretion (mg/day) RR (95% CI) Mean Adjusted Urinary Calcium Excretion (mg/day) RR (95% CI)
<120 178 1.00 (reference) 161 1.00 (reference) 189 1.00 (reference)
120–139 186 1.10 (0.68, 1.77) 179 1.33 (0.91, 1.93) 206 0.93 (0.63, 1.39)
140–159 192 0.90 (0.56, 1.43) 174 1.37 (0.91, 2.07) 196 1.10 (0.74, 1.64)
160–179 201 1.10 (0.68, 1.77) 193 1.44 (0.90, 2.29) 214 1.17 (0.75, 1.84)
180–199 205 1.49 (0.88, 2.50) 188 1.05 (0.64, 1.71) 206 0.94 (0.54, 1.63)
200–219 203 1.61 (0.93, 2.81) 170 0.93 (0.51, 1.69) 234 1.14 (0.64, 2.01)
220+ 228 2.06 (1.27, 3.32) 208 1.79 (1.05, 3.04) 229 1.01 (0.63, 1.63)

Risk adjusted for age, history of hypertension, body mass index and urinary factors—total volume, creatinine, oxalate, uric acid, citrate, magnesium, potassium, phosphosphorus and pH.

HPFS: Health Professionals Follow-up Study—728 cases and 417 controls (total 1145).

NHS I: Nurses’ Health Study I—947 cases and 407 controls (total 1354).

NHS II: Nurses’ Health Study II—833 cases and 443 controls (1276).