Association of insulin resistance indices with kidney stones and their recurrence in a non-diabetic population: an analysis based on NHANES data from 2007–2018

To systematically evaluate the association between insulin resistance indices and the risk of kidney stones and their recurrence in U.S. non-diabetic individuals, while identifying predictive indicators. This cross-sectional study analyzed data from the 2007-2018 NHANES. Five IR indices were calcula...

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Published inRenal failure Vol. 47; no. 1; p. 2490203
Main Authors Yang, Yu-Xuan, Xiang, Jia-Cheng, Ye, Gui-Chen, Luo, Kuang-Di, Wang, Shao-Gang, Xia, Qi-Dong
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Taylor & Francis 01.12.2025
Taylor & Francis Group
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Summary:To systematically evaluate the association between insulin resistance indices and the risk of kidney stones and their recurrence in U.S. non-diabetic individuals, while identifying predictive indicators. This cross-sectional study analyzed data from the 2007-2018 NHANES. Five IR indices were calculated. Weighted logistic regression, restricted cubic spline, and mediation analyses were used to assess the independent associations between these indices and the risk of kidney stones and recurrence in non-diabetic individuals. This study of 9,605 non-diabetic participants showed an overall kidney stones incidence of 8.63% and a recurrence rate of 2.70%. Weighted logistic regression and RCS analyses revealed significant positive associations between METs-IR, HOMA-IR, TyG-BMI, and the risk of kidney stones and their recurrence. Every unit increase in METs-IR was linked to a 2% rise in the incidence of kidney stones (95% CI: 1.014-1.027,  < 0.001) and a 3.3% rise in recurrence (95% CI: 1.018-1.048,  < 0.001); each unit increase in HOMA-IR raised incidence by 5% (95% CI: 1.025-1.078,  < 0.001) and recurrence by 7.9% (95% CI: 1.041-1.118,  < 0.001). Adjusting for confounders shifted these relationships from nonlinear to linear (  > 0.05). METs-IR demonstrated the strongest diagnostic accuracy for predicting recurrence, with uric acid and vitamin D mediating associations between IR indices and the risk of kidney stones and their recurrence in non-diabetic individuals. This study found that elevated IR indices (METs-IR, HOMA-IR, TyG-BMI) significantly increased kidney stone risk in a non-diabetic population. Serum uric acid and vitamin D mediated this association, with METs-IR best predicting kidney stones incidence and recurrence.
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Co-correspondence authorship: Two corresponding authors contributed equally to this work
Coauthors authorship: Two coauthors contributed equally to this work
Supplemental data for this article can be accessed online at https://doi.org/10.1080/0886022X.2025.2490203.
ISSN:0886-022X
1525-6049
1525-6049
DOI:10.1080/0886022X.2025.2490203