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Relationship between gout flare states and patient-reported outcomes following allopurinol initiation. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Gout flares are crucial indicators of the disease's impact, with specific maximum flare counts linked to acceptable symptom states (PASS) and low disease activity (LDA).
  • A study analyzed data from 179 gout patients over 12 months, focusing on flare occurrences and assessing their impact on patient-reported outcomes, including quality of life and illness perception.
  • Results showed that while many participants achieved either PASS or LDA, increased flare frequency correlated with higher negative impacts on patients, emphasizing the need for effective flare prevention strategies in gout management.

Article Abstract

Objective: Gout flares are the most important clinical feature of the disease. A hypothetical maximum flare occurrence in the preceding six-months has been suggested to be no flares for a patient acceptable symptom state (PASS) and only one flare for low disease activity (LDA). The aim of this analysis was to determine the relationship between gout flare states (PASS, LDA, and not in LDA or PASS (non-LDA/PASS)) and patient reported outcomes.

Methods: Post hoc analyses of variance were undertaken using data from a 12-month RCT involving 179 people with gout which compared low-dose colchicine to placebo for the first six months while starting allopurinol, with a further 6-month follow-up. Self-reported gout flares were collected monthly. HAQ and EQ-5D-3L were completed 3-monthly and the gout-specific brief illness perception questionnaire was collected at months 0, 6, and 12.

Results: In the final six months of the study 68 (38%) participants were classified as being in PASS, 34 (19%) as in LDA, and 77 (43%) as non-LDA/PASS. There was no association between gout flare states and EQ-5D-3L or HAQ. There was a statistically significant association between 3/8 eight BIPQ items, with increasing consequences, identity and concern scores across the three states of PASS, LDA, and non-LDA/PASS.

Conclusion: The majority of people were able to achieve gout flare PASS or LDA in the second six months after commencing allopurinol. As flare burden increases, so does the impact of gout on the patient. These findings highlight the importance of flare prevention in the management of gout.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/acr.25494DOI Listing

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