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Is a Xanthine Oxidase Inhibitor or a Mechanism-Based Approach Best for First-Line Gout Treatment?

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For gout, xanthine oxidase (XO) inhibitors are the choice for first-line urate-lowering therapy (ULT) according to the 2020 American College of Rheumatology Guideline for the Management of Gout, which endorsed allopurinol, but should that be the approach for all patients, or should first-line therapy be tailored to the mechanism of each patient’s hyperuricemia? Two gout experts, Lisa Stamp, MBChB, PhD, a rheumatologist and professor of medicine at the University of Otago in Christchurch, New Zealand, and Fernando Pérez-Ruiz, MD, PhD, consultant in the Rheumatology Division of Cruces University Hospital, Barakaldo, head of the Investigation Group for Arthritis at Biocruces Health Research Institute, Barakaldo, and associate professor in the Department of Medicine at the Faculty of Medicine and Nursing at the University of the Basque Country in Leioa, Spain, debated this question recently at the annual research symposium of the Gout, Hyperuricemia and Crystal-Associated Disease Network.

Before the debate began, audience members voted on the question and 56% favored using XO inhibitors as a first-line therapy for all rather than tailoring first-line therapy to disease mechanism.

Up first, Stamp argued that XO inhibitors should be first-line therapy for all patients with gout. She said that XO inhibitors have been demonstrated to work regardless of the cause of hyperuricemia and degree of kidney function, and they are cheap, readily available, and easy to administer. She showed results from a study published by her debate opponent, Pérez-Ruiz, which demonstrated efficacy of XO inhibitors in both under-excreters and over-excreters of uric acid. That study compared the efficacy of the XO inhibitor allopurinol to the uricosuric agent benzbromarone and found the latter to be more effective, but Stamp argued that the allopurinol dose used in the study — 300 mg/d — “may not be enough for many patients who have gout. Dose-restricting allopurinol is one way to demonstrate that an alternative agent is superior,” she said.

A more recent study showed low-dose benzbromarone was better than low-dose febuxostat, another XO inhibitor. “I think we do need to have clinical trials that reflect real-world practice. I accept that this may have reflected [accepted practice where the studies] were undertaken, but these [XO inhibitor] doses don’t represent what many of us would do in other parts of the world,” Stamp said.

One concern is the utility of a ULT in patients with impaired renal function. Stamp cited her own post hoc analysis of a randomized, controlled trial showing that allopurinol is effective irrespective of renal function, as long as the dose is escalated to achieve target urate level, and a meta-analysis of observational studies suggesting that febuxostat is effective irrespective of renal function.

On the other hand, she showed data from a 1994 study of benzbromarone in renal transplant recipients, which showed that the drug’s effect on decreasing plasma uric acid dropped off significantly with lower creatinine clearance. “It does work, but the efficacy really drops off as renal function decreases. Benzbromarone is probably the most effective uricosuric in patients with renal impairment, but this agent is not readily available,” Stamp said.

The uricosuric agent probenecid, which is generally available across the world, led to only about 30% success in achieving target levels of uric acid among patients with an estimated glomerular filtration rate < 50 mL/min/1.73 m2. “I think we can all agree that getting 30% of our patients to target uric acid is not an acceptable outcome,” she said.

Stamp emphasized the importance of drug availability and noted that allopurinol is also the only medication for gout that is on the World Health Organization list of essential medications. “I think we should be recommending medications that are readily available, irrespective of where you live,” she said, noting that this is true of allopurinol, febuxostat, and probenecid.

Stamp also addressed the mechanism of action of ULTs. “Does the cause of hyperuricemia affect treatment response? I don’t think it does. Most people respond to allopurinol whether they’re a normal excreter or an under-excreter. Everyone who is lacking uricase will respond to allopurinol. Not everyone will respond to a uricosuric [agent], particularly in the setting of comorbidities such as renal impairment, which many of our patients with gout have,” she said.

 

Counterargument: Combine Therapies With Different Mechanisms of Action

In his counterargument, Pérez-Ruiz contended that gout is not in fact a metabolic disease and suggested that combining therapies with different mechanisms of action could be the best approach for difficult-to-treat gout. “The problem we face in clinical practice is how to treat difficult-to-treat patients,” he said. He referenced his own PhD thesis, which showed both high urinary uric acid output and underexcretion among patients with gout.

Pérez-Ruiz agreed that XO inhibitors should be used as first-line therapy but noted that the effect of allopurinol tapers off at higher doses. “If you use very high doses of allopurinol, you cannot expect to get much more effect,” he said. This is also true of febuxostat, he said.

He showed another study that illustrated difficulties in achieving target serum urate level with intensive therapy. “Even using a high dose of allopurinol, if you would like to get lower than 3 mg/dL for intensive therapy, close to 50% of patients will fail,” he said.

Pérez-Ruiz described a strategy of combining XO inhibitors with a uricosuric therapy, creating what he called a “uricase-like effect” on serum uric acid levels. Ruiz-Perez uses high-dose febuxostat in patients with chronic kidney disease who cannot be given uricosuric agents. “You can go to very low [serum urate levels] by raising up the doses,” he said.

He does not believe that allopurinol is the best agent for combination therapy in the treatment of tophaceous deposits. Instead, he favors combinations with febuxostat. He presented his own experience with 12 patients with very severe tophaceous gout who he treated with a combination of febuxostat and benzbromarone, which reduced serum urate to just over 2 mg/dL. “So this is a pegloticase-like effect [that is] very useful for tophaceous gout,” he said.

In her response, Stamp noted that most of the studies presented by Pérez-Ruiz showed XO inhibitors as first-line therapies, with other medications added on. “I think I heard Fernando agree with me. In just about all of those slides, he showed that a xanthine oxidase inhibitor was the first-line therapy, and subsequently a uricosuric was added,” she said.

Still, Stamp took issue with the idea that serum urate needs to get as low as Pérez-Ruiz advocated for. “What’s the risk associated with getting a serum urate to that level? I’m not sure that a sustained serum urate of around 1 [mg/dL] is necessarily good in the long term,” she said.

Stamp also pointed out the potential risks of polypharmacy, along with adherence issues. “If we can give our patients one therapy, one drug that’s going to get them to a target that we know is going to have beneficial long-term effects, that’s going to help improve our adherence. Maybe we are coming to a new era of [treatment, with] remission induction driving the serum urate very low, and then a maintenance therapy where we can back off. But irrespective, if you use that strategy, Fernando nicely showed that every time you’re going to start with a xanthine oxidase inhibitor,” she said.

After the debate, audience members voted again, and this time the result was 66% in favor of XO inhibitors as a first-line treatment.

Pérez-Ruiz is an adviser for Arthrosi, LG, Novartis, Protalix, and SOBI. He is a speaker for Menarini Central America and the Spanish Foundation for Rheumatology and has received funding from Cruces Rheumatology Association. Stamp did not disclose any financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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For gout, xanthine oxidase (XO) inhibitors are the choice for first-line urate-lowering therapy (ULT) according to the 2020 American College of Rheumatology Guideline for the Management of Gout, which endorsed allopurinol, but should that be the approach for all patients, or should first-line therapy be tailored to the mechanism of each patient’s hyperuricemia? Two gout experts, Lisa Stamp, MBChB, PhD, a rheumatologist and professor of medicine at the University of Otago in Christchurch, New Zealand, and Fernando Pérez-Ruiz, MD, PhD, consultant in the Rheumatology Division of Cruces University Hospital, Barakaldo, head of the Investigation Group for Arthritis at Biocruces Health Research Institute, Barakaldo, and associate professor in the Department of Medicine at the Faculty of Medicine and Nursing at the University of the Basque Country in Leioa, Spain, debated this question recently at the annual research symposium of the Gout, Hyperuricemia and Crystal-Associated Disease Network.

Before the debate began, audience members voted on the question and 56% favored using XO inhibitors as a first-line therapy for all rather than tailoring first-line therapy to disease mechanism.

Up first, Stamp argued that XO inhibitors should be first-line therapy for all patients with gout. She said that XO inhibitors have been demonstrated to work regardless of the cause of hyperuricemia and degree of kidney function, and they are cheap, readily available, and easy to administer. She showed results from a study published by her debate opponent, Pérez-Ruiz, which demonstrated efficacy of XO inhibitors in both under-excreters and over-excreters of uric acid. That study compared the efficacy of the XO inhibitor allopurinol to the uricosuric agent benzbromarone and found the latter to be more effective, but Stamp argued that the allopurinol dose used in the study — 300 mg/d — “may not be enough for many patients who have gout. Dose-restricting allopurinol is one way to demonstrate that an alternative agent is superior,” she said.

A more recent study showed low-dose benzbromarone was better than low-dose febuxostat, another XO inhibitor. “I think we do need to have clinical trials that reflect real-world practice. I accept that this may have reflected [accepted practice where the studies] were undertaken, but these [XO inhibitor] doses don’t represent what many of us would do in other parts of the world,” Stamp said.

One concern is the utility of a ULT in patients with impaired renal function. Stamp cited her own post hoc analysis of a randomized, controlled trial showing that allopurinol is effective irrespective of renal function, as long as the dose is escalated to achieve target urate level, and a meta-analysis of observational studies suggesting that febuxostat is effective irrespective of renal function.

On the other hand, she showed data from a 1994 study of benzbromarone in renal transplant recipients, which showed that the drug’s effect on decreasing plasma uric acid dropped off significantly with lower creatinine clearance. “It does work, but the efficacy really drops off as renal function decreases. Benzbromarone is probably the most effective uricosuric in patients with renal impairment, but this agent is not readily available,” Stamp said.

The uricosuric agent probenecid, which is generally available across the world, led to only about 30% success in achieving target levels of uric acid among patients with an estimated glomerular filtration rate < 50 mL/min/1.73 m2. “I think we can all agree that getting 30% of our patients to target uric acid is not an acceptable outcome,” she said.

Stamp emphasized the importance of drug availability and noted that allopurinol is also the only medication for gout that is on the World Health Organization list of essential medications. “I think we should be recommending medications that are readily available, irrespective of where you live,” she said, noting that this is true of allopurinol, febuxostat, and probenecid.

Stamp also addressed the mechanism of action of ULTs. “Does the cause of hyperuricemia affect treatment response? I don’t think it does. Most people respond to allopurinol whether they’re a normal excreter or an under-excreter. Everyone who is lacking uricase will respond to allopurinol. Not everyone will respond to a uricosuric [agent], particularly in the setting of comorbidities such as renal impairment, which many of our patients with gout have,” she said.

 

Counterargument: Combine Therapies With Different Mechanisms of Action

In his counterargument, Pérez-Ruiz contended that gout is not in fact a metabolic disease and suggested that combining therapies with different mechanisms of action could be the best approach for difficult-to-treat gout. “The problem we face in clinical practice is how to treat difficult-to-treat patients,” he said. He referenced his own PhD thesis, which showed both high urinary uric acid output and underexcretion among patients with gout.

Pérez-Ruiz agreed that XO inhibitors should be used as first-line therapy but noted that the effect of allopurinol tapers off at higher doses. “If you use very high doses of allopurinol, you cannot expect to get much more effect,” he said. This is also true of febuxostat, he said.

He showed another study that illustrated difficulties in achieving target serum urate level with intensive therapy. “Even using a high dose of allopurinol, if you would like to get lower than 3 mg/dL for intensive therapy, close to 50% of patients will fail,” he said.

Pérez-Ruiz described a strategy of combining XO inhibitors with a uricosuric therapy, creating what he called a “uricase-like effect” on serum uric acid levels. Ruiz-Perez uses high-dose febuxostat in patients with chronic kidney disease who cannot be given uricosuric agents. “You can go to very low [serum urate levels] by raising up the doses,” he said.

He does not believe that allopurinol is the best agent for combination therapy in the treatment of tophaceous deposits. Instead, he favors combinations with febuxostat. He presented his own experience with 12 patients with very severe tophaceous gout who he treated with a combination of febuxostat and benzbromarone, which reduced serum urate to just over 2 mg/dL. “So this is a pegloticase-like effect [that is] very useful for tophaceous gout,” he said.

In her response, Stamp noted that most of the studies presented by Pérez-Ruiz showed XO inhibitors as first-line therapies, with other medications added on. “I think I heard Fernando agree with me. In just about all of those slides, he showed that a xanthine oxidase inhibitor was the first-line therapy, and subsequently a uricosuric was added,” she said.

Still, Stamp took issue with the idea that serum urate needs to get as low as Pérez-Ruiz advocated for. “What’s the risk associated with getting a serum urate to that level? I’m not sure that a sustained serum urate of around 1 [mg/dL] is necessarily good in the long term,” she said.

Stamp also pointed out the potential risks of polypharmacy, along with adherence issues. “If we can give our patients one therapy, one drug that’s going to get them to a target that we know is going to have beneficial long-term effects, that’s going to help improve our adherence. Maybe we are coming to a new era of [treatment, with] remission induction driving the serum urate very low, and then a maintenance therapy where we can back off. But irrespective, if you use that strategy, Fernando nicely showed that every time you’re going to start with a xanthine oxidase inhibitor,” she said.

After the debate, audience members voted again, and this time the result was 66% in favor of XO inhibitors as a first-line treatment.

Pérez-Ruiz is an adviser for Arthrosi, LG, Novartis, Protalix, and SOBI. He is a speaker for Menarini Central America and the Spanish Foundation for Rheumatology and has received funding from Cruces Rheumatology Association. Stamp did not disclose any financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

For gout, xanthine oxidase (XO) inhibitors are the choice for first-line urate-lowering therapy (ULT) according to the 2020 American College of Rheumatology Guideline for the Management of Gout, which endorsed allopurinol, but should that be the approach for all patients, or should first-line therapy be tailored to the mechanism of each patient’s hyperuricemia? Two gout experts, Lisa Stamp, MBChB, PhD, a rheumatologist and professor of medicine at the University of Otago in Christchurch, New Zealand, and Fernando Pérez-Ruiz, MD, PhD, consultant in the Rheumatology Division of Cruces University Hospital, Barakaldo, head of the Investigation Group for Arthritis at Biocruces Health Research Institute, Barakaldo, and associate professor in the Department of Medicine at the Faculty of Medicine and Nursing at the University of the Basque Country in Leioa, Spain, debated this question recently at the annual research symposium of the Gout, Hyperuricemia and Crystal-Associated Disease Network.

Before the debate began, audience members voted on the question and 56% favored using XO inhibitors as a first-line therapy for all rather than tailoring first-line therapy to disease mechanism.

Up first, Stamp argued that XO inhibitors should be first-line therapy for all patients with gout. She said that XO inhibitors have been demonstrated to work regardless of the cause of hyperuricemia and degree of kidney function, and they are cheap, readily available, and easy to administer. She showed results from a study published by her debate opponent, Pérez-Ruiz, which demonstrated efficacy of XO inhibitors in both under-excreters and over-excreters of uric acid. That study compared the efficacy of the XO inhibitor allopurinol to the uricosuric agent benzbromarone and found the latter to be more effective, but Stamp argued that the allopurinol dose used in the study — 300 mg/d — “may not be enough for many patients who have gout. Dose-restricting allopurinol is one way to demonstrate that an alternative agent is superior,” she said.

A more recent study showed low-dose benzbromarone was better than low-dose febuxostat, another XO inhibitor. “I think we do need to have clinical trials that reflect real-world practice. I accept that this may have reflected [accepted practice where the studies] were undertaken, but these [XO inhibitor] doses don’t represent what many of us would do in other parts of the world,” Stamp said.

One concern is the utility of a ULT in patients with impaired renal function. Stamp cited her own post hoc analysis of a randomized, controlled trial showing that allopurinol is effective irrespective of renal function, as long as the dose is escalated to achieve target urate level, and a meta-analysis of observational studies suggesting that febuxostat is effective irrespective of renal function.

On the other hand, she showed data from a 1994 study of benzbromarone in renal transplant recipients, which showed that the drug’s effect on decreasing plasma uric acid dropped off significantly with lower creatinine clearance. “It does work, but the efficacy really drops off as renal function decreases. Benzbromarone is probably the most effective uricosuric in patients with renal impairment, but this agent is not readily available,” Stamp said.

The uricosuric agent probenecid, which is generally available across the world, led to only about 30% success in achieving target levels of uric acid among patients with an estimated glomerular filtration rate < 50 mL/min/1.73 m2. “I think we can all agree that getting 30% of our patients to target uric acid is not an acceptable outcome,” she said.

Stamp emphasized the importance of drug availability and noted that allopurinol is also the only medication for gout that is on the World Health Organization list of essential medications. “I think we should be recommending medications that are readily available, irrespective of where you live,” she said, noting that this is true of allopurinol, febuxostat, and probenecid.

Stamp also addressed the mechanism of action of ULTs. “Does the cause of hyperuricemia affect treatment response? I don’t think it does. Most people respond to allopurinol whether they’re a normal excreter or an under-excreter. Everyone who is lacking uricase will respond to allopurinol. Not everyone will respond to a uricosuric [agent], particularly in the setting of comorbidities such as renal impairment, which many of our patients with gout have,” she said.

 

Counterargument: Combine Therapies With Different Mechanisms of Action

In his counterargument, Pérez-Ruiz contended that gout is not in fact a metabolic disease and suggested that combining therapies with different mechanisms of action could be the best approach for difficult-to-treat gout. “The problem we face in clinical practice is how to treat difficult-to-treat patients,” he said. He referenced his own PhD thesis, which showed both high urinary uric acid output and underexcretion among patients with gout.

Pérez-Ruiz agreed that XO inhibitors should be used as first-line therapy but noted that the effect of allopurinol tapers off at higher doses. “If you use very high doses of allopurinol, you cannot expect to get much more effect,” he said. This is also true of febuxostat, he said.

He showed another study that illustrated difficulties in achieving target serum urate level with intensive therapy. “Even using a high dose of allopurinol, if you would like to get lower than 3 mg/dL for intensive therapy, close to 50% of patients will fail,” he said.

Pérez-Ruiz described a strategy of combining XO inhibitors with a uricosuric therapy, creating what he called a “uricase-like effect” on serum uric acid levels. Ruiz-Perez uses high-dose febuxostat in patients with chronic kidney disease who cannot be given uricosuric agents. “You can go to very low [serum urate levels] by raising up the doses,” he said.

He does not believe that allopurinol is the best agent for combination therapy in the treatment of tophaceous deposits. Instead, he favors combinations with febuxostat. He presented his own experience with 12 patients with very severe tophaceous gout who he treated with a combination of febuxostat and benzbromarone, which reduced serum urate to just over 2 mg/dL. “So this is a pegloticase-like effect [that is] very useful for tophaceous gout,” he said.

In her response, Stamp noted that most of the studies presented by Pérez-Ruiz showed XO inhibitors as first-line therapies, with other medications added on. “I think I heard Fernando agree with me. In just about all of those slides, he showed that a xanthine oxidase inhibitor was the first-line therapy, and subsequently a uricosuric was added,” she said.

Still, Stamp took issue with the idea that serum urate needs to get as low as Pérez-Ruiz advocated for. “What’s the risk associated with getting a serum urate to that level? I’m not sure that a sustained serum urate of around 1 [mg/dL] is necessarily good in the long term,” she said.

Stamp also pointed out the potential risks of polypharmacy, along with adherence issues. “If we can give our patients one therapy, one drug that’s going to get them to a target that we know is going to have beneficial long-term effects, that’s going to help improve our adherence. Maybe we are coming to a new era of [treatment, with] remission induction driving the serum urate very low, and then a maintenance therapy where we can back off. But irrespective, if you use that strategy, Fernando nicely showed that every time you’re going to start with a xanthine oxidase inhibitor,” she said.

After the debate, audience members voted again, and this time the result was 66% in favor of XO inhibitors as a first-line treatment.

Pérez-Ruiz is an adviser for Arthrosi, LG, Novartis, Protalix, and SOBI. He is a speaker for Menarini Central America and the Spanish Foundation for Rheumatology and has received funding from Cruces Rheumatology Association. Stamp did not disclose any financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Uric Acid Levels, Gout Symptoms Improved With Plant-Based Diet in Pilot Trial

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A Mediterranean-inspired plant-based diet improved self-reported measures of gout as well as uric acid levels, a pilot study has found. 

There hasn’t been a lot of research on diet in gout, according to Anna Kretova, RD, who presented the study at the annual research symposium of the Gout Hyperuricemia and Crystal-Associated Disease Network. She noted that a 2019 systematic review of low-calorie diets, low-purine diets, and Mediterranean diets found that uric acid levels below 0.6 mmol/L were achieved only in those on the Mediterranean diet (Nutrients. 2019 Dec 4;11[12]:2955). A 2020 study compared a low-fat, high-carbohydrate, plant-based diet vs an animal-based, ketogenic diet in healthy individuals. After 2 weeks, uric acid levels increased in those on the animal-based, low-carb diet and decreased in those on the plant-based diet. 

Some foods are considered to be proinflammatory and generally come from animal origins, including saturated fats and animal protein in addition to ultraprocessed foods. Foods that have anti-inflammatory properties are mostly plant based and unprocessed and often rich in fiber. “From recent interventional studies, we also know that the whole-foods plant-based diet has shown to be effective as treatments of the main comorbidities of gout, such as obesity, cardiovascular disease, or [osteoarthritis],” said Kretova, who is a registered dietitian and a researcher at the Reade Rehabilitation and Rheumatology Center, Amsterdam, the Netherlands. 

Those findings led the researchers to develop a whole-foods, plant-based diet and test its effect on serum uric acid in patients with gout, as well as gout disease activity and cardiovascular disease risk. Participants could not eat meat, fish, eggs, or dairy. 

The trial included 33 individuals with gout who were randomized to a 16-week intervention with five consultations with a registered dietitian (n = 18) or a wait-list control group (n = 15) who received standard care. The mean age overall was 52 years, and 91% were men. The mean body mass index (BMI) was 32.6 kg/m2, and the median uric acid level was 0.50 mmol/L (8.4 mg/dL).

Among gout-related outcomes, the researchers noted improvements in gout severity as measured by visual analog scale (VAS; between group difference, –2.0; P =.01), pain as measured by VAS (between group difference, –2.0; P =.04), and uric acid levels after adjustment for age, sex, and BMI (between group difference, –0.05 mmol/L, P =.004). There were also improvements in the intervention group in weight loss (between group difference, –5.3 kg; P <.0001), BMI (between group difference, –1.7; P < .0001), waist circumference (between group difference, –3.9 cm; P = .004), and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol (between group difference, –0.5; P = .007).

At 16 weeks, “we concluded that a Mediterranean-inspired whole-foods, plant-based diet significantly lowers serum uric acid in patients with gout and abdominal obesity, and additionally, the diet reduces gout-related pain and disease activity, promotes substantial weight loss, decreases weight circumference, and improves LDL cholesterol levels, and thus decreases [cardiovascular disease] risk in these patients,” Kretova said. 

She added that some might question whether a uric acid reduction of –0.05 mmol/L is clinically relevant. “We would argue it is because of the strong decrease in disease activity and pain in the intervention group,” Kretova said. 

The study is limited by its small size, the fact that it was not blinded, and the 4-month duration, which might be too short to capture potential indirect effects of diet on hyperuricemia and chronic inflammation, Kretova said. The group is planning to follow participants out to 12 months in an extension study.

During the Q&A session after the presentation, an audience member asked if the participants were vegetarians before they entered the study, and whether the dietary change could be sustained. “It’s a very good proof-of-concept study, but whether an intervention based entirely on plant-based therapy will be something that patients will be able to adhere to long term [is uncertain],” Kretova said.

She was optimistic, even though the participants generally enjoyed food and ate a lot of red meat. “I think there will be a gradation of people who can sustain and who cannot sustain [the diet]. From what we saw, people actually found it easier to follow than they expected, and a lot of participants changed their diet permanently for the better. Not everyone became [entirely] plant-based, but they became much more plant-based than they expected from themselves. So, it is definitely feasible,” she said.

Kretova reported no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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A Mediterranean-inspired plant-based diet improved self-reported measures of gout as well as uric acid levels, a pilot study has found. 

There hasn’t been a lot of research on diet in gout, according to Anna Kretova, RD, who presented the study at the annual research symposium of the Gout Hyperuricemia and Crystal-Associated Disease Network. She noted that a 2019 systematic review of low-calorie diets, low-purine diets, and Mediterranean diets found that uric acid levels below 0.6 mmol/L were achieved only in those on the Mediterranean diet (Nutrients. 2019 Dec 4;11[12]:2955). A 2020 study compared a low-fat, high-carbohydrate, plant-based diet vs an animal-based, ketogenic diet in healthy individuals. After 2 weeks, uric acid levels increased in those on the animal-based, low-carb diet and decreased in those on the plant-based diet. 

Some foods are considered to be proinflammatory and generally come from animal origins, including saturated fats and animal protein in addition to ultraprocessed foods. Foods that have anti-inflammatory properties are mostly plant based and unprocessed and often rich in fiber. “From recent interventional studies, we also know that the whole-foods plant-based diet has shown to be effective as treatments of the main comorbidities of gout, such as obesity, cardiovascular disease, or [osteoarthritis],” said Kretova, who is a registered dietitian and a researcher at the Reade Rehabilitation and Rheumatology Center, Amsterdam, the Netherlands. 

Those findings led the researchers to develop a whole-foods, plant-based diet and test its effect on serum uric acid in patients with gout, as well as gout disease activity and cardiovascular disease risk. Participants could not eat meat, fish, eggs, or dairy. 

The trial included 33 individuals with gout who were randomized to a 16-week intervention with five consultations with a registered dietitian (n = 18) or a wait-list control group (n = 15) who received standard care. The mean age overall was 52 years, and 91% were men. The mean body mass index (BMI) was 32.6 kg/m2, and the median uric acid level was 0.50 mmol/L (8.4 mg/dL).

Among gout-related outcomes, the researchers noted improvements in gout severity as measured by visual analog scale (VAS; between group difference, –2.0; P =.01), pain as measured by VAS (between group difference, –2.0; P =.04), and uric acid levels after adjustment for age, sex, and BMI (between group difference, –0.05 mmol/L, P =.004). There were also improvements in the intervention group in weight loss (between group difference, –5.3 kg; P <.0001), BMI (between group difference, –1.7; P < .0001), waist circumference (between group difference, –3.9 cm; P = .004), and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol (between group difference, –0.5; P = .007).

At 16 weeks, “we concluded that a Mediterranean-inspired whole-foods, plant-based diet significantly lowers serum uric acid in patients with gout and abdominal obesity, and additionally, the diet reduces gout-related pain and disease activity, promotes substantial weight loss, decreases weight circumference, and improves LDL cholesterol levels, and thus decreases [cardiovascular disease] risk in these patients,” Kretova said. 

She added that some might question whether a uric acid reduction of –0.05 mmol/L is clinically relevant. “We would argue it is because of the strong decrease in disease activity and pain in the intervention group,” Kretova said. 

The study is limited by its small size, the fact that it was not blinded, and the 4-month duration, which might be too short to capture potential indirect effects of diet on hyperuricemia and chronic inflammation, Kretova said. The group is planning to follow participants out to 12 months in an extension study.

During the Q&A session after the presentation, an audience member asked if the participants were vegetarians before they entered the study, and whether the dietary change could be sustained. “It’s a very good proof-of-concept study, but whether an intervention based entirely on plant-based therapy will be something that patients will be able to adhere to long term [is uncertain],” Kretova said.

She was optimistic, even though the participants generally enjoyed food and ate a lot of red meat. “I think there will be a gradation of people who can sustain and who cannot sustain [the diet]. From what we saw, people actually found it easier to follow than they expected, and a lot of participants changed their diet permanently for the better. Not everyone became [entirely] plant-based, but they became much more plant-based than they expected from themselves. So, it is definitely feasible,” she said.

Kretova reported no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

A Mediterranean-inspired plant-based diet improved self-reported measures of gout as well as uric acid levels, a pilot study has found. 

There hasn’t been a lot of research on diet in gout, according to Anna Kretova, RD, who presented the study at the annual research symposium of the Gout Hyperuricemia and Crystal-Associated Disease Network. She noted that a 2019 systematic review of low-calorie diets, low-purine diets, and Mediterranean diets found that uric acid levels below 0.6 mmol/L were achieved only in those on the Mediterranean diet (Nutrients. 2019 Dec 4;11[12]:2955). A 2020 study compared a low-fat, high-carbohydrate, plant-based diet vs an animal-based, ketogenic diet in healthy individuals. After 2 weeks, uric acid levels increased in those on the animal-based, low-carb diet and decreased in those on the plant-based diet. 

Some foods are considered to be proinflammatory and generally come from animal origins, including saturated fats and animal protein in addition to ultraprocessed foods. Foods that have anti-inflammatory properties are mostly plant based and unprocessed and often rich in fiber. “From recent interventional studies, we also know that the whole-foods plant-based diet has shown to be effective as treatments of the main comorbidities of gout, such as obesity, cardiovascular disease, or [osteoarthritis],” said Kretova, who is a registered dietitian and a researcher at the Reade Rehabilitation and Rheumatology Center, Amsterdam, the Netherlands. 

Those findings led the researchers to develop a whole-foods, plant-based diet and test its effect on serum uric acid in patients with gout, as well as gout disease activity and cardiovascular disease risk. Participants could not eat meat, fish, eggs, or dairy. 

The trial included 33 individuals with gout who were randomized to a 16-week intervention with five consultations with a registered dietitian (n = 18) or a wait-list control group (n = 15) who received standard care. The mean age overall was 52 years, and 91% were men. The mean body mass index (BMI) was 32.6 kg/m2, and the median uric acid level was 0.50 mmol/L (8.4 mg/dL).

Among gout-related outcomes, the researchers noted improvements in gout severity as measured by visual analog scale (VAS; between group difference, –2.0; P =.01), pain as measured by VAS (between group difference, –2.0; P =.04), and uric acid levels after adjustment for age, sex, and BMI (between group difference, –0.05 mmol/L, P =.004). There were also improvements in the intervention group in weight loss (between group difference, –5.3 kg; P <.0001), BMI (between group difference, –1.7; P < .0001), waist circumference (between group difference, –3.9 cm; P = .004), and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol (between group difference, –0.5; P = .007).

At 16 weeks, “we concluded that a Mediterranean-inspired whole-foods, plant-based diet significantly lowers serum uric acid in patients with gout and abdominal obesity, and additionally, the diet reduces gout-related pain and disease activity, promotes substantial weight loss, decreases weight circumference, and improves LDL cholesterol levels, and thus decreases [cardiovascular disease] risk in these patients,” Kretova said. 

She added that some might question whether a uric acid reduction of –0.05 mmol/L is clinically relevant. “We would argue it is because of the strong decrease in disease activity and pain in the intervention group,” Kretova said. 

The study is limited by its small size, the fact that it was not blinded, and the 4-month duration, which might be too short to capture potential indirect effects of diet on hyperuricemia and chronic inflammation, Kretova said. The group is planning to follow participants out to 12 months in an extension study.

During the Q&A session after the presentation, an audience member asked if the participants were vegetarians before they entered the study, and whether the dietary change could be sustained. “It’s a very good proof-of-concept study, but whether an intervention based entirely on plant-based therapy will be something that patients will be able to adhere to long term [is uncertain],” Kretova said.

She was optimistic, even though the participants generally enjoyed food and ate a lot of red meat. “I think there will be a gradation of people who can sustain and who cannot sustain [the diet]. From what we saw, people actually found it easier to follow than they expected, and a lot of participants changed their diet permanently for the better. Not everyone became [entirely] plant-based, but they became much more plant-based than they expected from themselves. So, it is definitely feasible,” she said.

Kretova reported no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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New Gout Remission Criteria Approved

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In a nearly unanimous vote at the annual research symposium of the Gout Hyperuricemia and Crystal-Associated Disease Network (G-CAN), members approved a revision to gout remission criteria first established in 2016. The new version simplifies the definition in response to patient comments that the earlier version was redundant in some areas. 

The previous version was developed following deliberations by 49 clinicians and researchers with experience in gout. They settled on a definition of gout remission that included five criteria:

  • Serum urate levels lower than 0.36 mmol/L measured at least twice over 12 months, with no intervening values of 0.36 mmol/L or higher
  • No gout flares over 12 months
  • No tophi
  • Pain score due to gout < 2 at least twice over 12 months on a 10-point Likert scale or 10-cm visual analog scale, with no intervening values ≥ 2
  • Patient global assessment of gout disease activity < 2 on a 10-point Likert scale or 10-cm visual analog scale, with no intervening values of ≥ 2.

Some participants reported that patients sometimes misattributed pain from other sources while using patient-reported outcomes (PROs). The argument for keeping PROs was that they are validated measures and endorsed by Outcome Measures in Rheumatology. Nevertheless, there was no direct patient involvement in the development of the 2016 criteria.

Researchers later interviewed 20 individuals with well-controlled gout to get their feedback on the 2016 criteria. Those individuals endorsed the existing criteria and did not suggest any new ones, but they suggested that the pain due to gout and the absence of gout flares were redundant measures. One said: “If you have no flare-ups, you’ve got no pain; it sort of answers itself.”

“That was a bit challenging for us because it wasn’t quite what we expected, but I think it did make us look again at the definition and think about whether we could simplify the definition further,” Nicola Dalbeth, MBChB, said during a presentation at G-CAN. Dalbeth is an academic rheumatologist at the University of Auckland, in New Zealand, who was also the lead author of the original criteria.

 

Simplified Version Created With Only Three Criteria

In response to these points, researchers produced a revised version with only three criteria, including the serum urate, absence of gout flares, and absence of subcutaneous tophi at the time of assessment.

To determine if the simplified criteria performed well, they compared the original and revised remission criteria in the context of the CARES trial, the Nottingham nurse-led trial, and randomized controlled trials in patients with gout that were conducted in New Zealand (here and here).

Dansoa Tabi-Amponsah, a PhD candidate at the University of Auckland, presented results of a study comparing the two versions in the Nottingham trial, which included 517 participants who received nurse-led or usual general practitioner care. The nurse-led care included education, regular follow-up and serum urate testing, individualized advice on gout flare management, and escalation of urate-lowering therapy with a treat-to-target strategy.

Both definitions demonstrated a link between the nurse-led strategy and increased rates of remission at year 1 and year 2, although the simplified definition found that more patients were in remission (17.6% vs 9.9% at year 1 and 42.7% vs 28.4% at year 2, both P < .001). “This is something we’ve seen across all of our analyses,” said Tabi-Amponsah. 

Both criteria also found significant differences in remission rates between the nurse-led group in year 2 vs year 1 but not in the usual care group.

Participants who achieved remission had better gout impact scale scores in areas like worrying that a gout attack will occur, fears of worsening gout, and concerns about the impact of gout on future activities. “This is important because during that qualitative study, a key aspect of being in remission was no longer being worried about their gout, no longer feeling anxious about having constant gout flares, and having control over their gout. So, it’s important to note that despite the absence of PROs in that simplified definition, it’s still able to align with the patients’ perspectives of their disease state,” said Tabi-Amponsah.

During the Q&A period after her talk, an audience member asked whether the higher rate of remission found by the simplified criteria is actually a good thing. “If I compare that to rheumatoid arthritis, when you use DAS28 you have a lot more remission, but still progression. So, are we missing some people? Are we including people in remission that still have disease?” she asked. 

Tabi-Amponsah responded that the pain and patient global assessment domains seem to be quite difficult to achieve. In a separate analysis, the researchers examined tender and swollen joint counts and found that those achieving remission no longer had tender or swollen joints. “So, we don’t think the simplified definition is heavily misclassifying anyone as being in remission,” she said. 

During the Q&A following Dalbeth’s talk, an audience member asked about patients with what he described as “mountains of tophi,” despite responding well to uricase therapy. “They may take months or even a year to really resolve that burden. They may be doing very well, yet they’re not going to be in remission because they’ve still got visible tophi. So, are we underselling them, and do we need a different definition for them doing well that this doesn’t capture?” he asked.

Dalbeth suggested that patients with large amounts of tophi aren’t really in remission. “I think we do need to be thinking about the disease, not just in terms of just crystals or just inflammation, but actually trying to integrate both of those, and I think this is where these composite measures might work quite well. I think we need to be aiming for holistic disease control, which is essentially what this is,” she said. 

Tabi-Amponsah and Dalbeth did not disclose any financial relationships. 

 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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In a nearly unanimous vote at the annual research symposium of the Gout Hyperuricemia and Crystal-Associated Disease Network (G-CAN), members approved a revision to gout remission criteria first established in 2016. The new version simplifies the definition in response to patient comments that the earlier version was redundant in some areas. 

The previous version was developed following deliberations by 49 clinicians and researchers with experience in gout. They settled on a definition of gout remission that included five criteria:

  • Serum urate levels lower than 0.36 mmol/L measured at least twice over 12 months, with no intervening values of 0.36 mmol/L or higher
  • No gout flares over 12 months
  • No tophi
  • Pain score due to gout < 2 at least twice over 12 months on a 10-point Likert scale or 10-cm visual analog scale, with no intervening values ≥ 2
  • Patient global assessment of gout disease activity < 2 on a 10-point Likert scale or 10-cm visual analog scale, with no intervening values of ≥ 2.

Some participants reported that patients sometimes misattributed pain from other sources while using patient-reported outcomes (PROs). The argument for keeping PROs was that they are validated measures and endorsed by Outcome Measures in Rheumatology. Nevertheless, there was no direct patient involvement in the development of the 2016 criteria.

Researchers later interviewed 20 individuals with well-controlled gout to get their feedback on the 2016 criteria. Those individuals endorsed the existing criteria and did not suggest any new ones, but they suggested that the pain due to gout and the absence of gout flares were redundant measures. One said: “If you have no flare-ups, you’ve got no pain; it sort of answers itself.”

“That was a bit challenging for us because it wasn’t quite what we expected, but I think it did make us look again at the definition and think about whether we could simplify the definition further,” Nicola Dalbeth, MBChB, said during a presentation at G-CAN. Dalbeth is an academic rheumatologist at the University of Auckland, in New Zealand, who was also the lead author of the original criteria.

 

Simplified Version Created With Only Three Criteria

In response to these points, researchers produced a revised version with only three criteria, including the serum urate, absence of gout flares, and absence of subcutaneous tophi at the time of assessment.

To determine if the simplified criteria performed well, they compared the original and revised remission criteria in the context of the CARES trial, the Nottingham nurse-led trial, and randomized controlled trials in patients with gout that were conducted in New Zealand (here and here).

Dansoa Tabi-Amponsah, a PhD candidate at the University of Auckland, presented results of a study comparing the two versions in the Nottingham trial, which included 517 participants who received nurse-led or usual general practitioner care. The nurse-led care included education, regular follow-up and serum urate testing, individualized advice on gout flare management, and escalation of urate-lowering therapy with a treat-to-target strategy.

Both definitions demonstrated a link between the nurse-led strategy and increased rates of remission at year 1 and year 2, although the simplified definition found that more patients were in remission (17.6% vs 9.9% at year 1 and 42.7% vs 28.4% at year 2, both P < .001). “This is something we’ve seen across all of our analyses,” said Tabi-Amponsah. 

Both criteria also found significant differences in remission rates between the nurse-led group in year 2 vs year 1 but not in the usual care group.

Participants who achieved remission had better gout impact scale scores in areas like worrying that a gout attack will occur, fears of worsening gout, and concerns about the impact of gout on future activities. “This is important because during that qualitative study, a key aspect of being in remission was no longer being worried about their gout, no longer feeling anxious about having constant gout flares, and having control over their gout. So, it’s important to note that despite the absence of PROs in that simplified definition, it’s still able to align with the patients’ perspectives of their disease state,” said Tabi-Amponsah.

During the Q&A period after her talk, an audience member asked whether the higher rate of remission found by the simplified criteria is actually a good thing. “If I compare that to rheumatoid arthritis, when you use DAS28 you have a lot more remission, but still progression. So, are we missing some people? Are we including people in remission that still have disease?” she asked. 

Tabi-Amponsah responded that the pain and patient global assessment domains seem to be quite difficult to achieve. In a separate analysis, the researchers examined tender and swollen joint counts and found that those achieving remission no longer had tender or swollen joints. “So, we don’t think the simplified definition is heavily misclassifying anyone as being in remission,” she said. 

During the Q&A following Dalbeth’s talk, an audience member asked about patients with what he described as “mountains of tophi,” despite responding well to uricase therapy. “They may take months or even a year to really resolve that burden. They may be doing very well, yet they’re not going to be in remission because they’ve still got visible tophi. So, are we underselling them, and do we need a different definition for them doing well that this doesn’t capture?” he asked.

Dalbeth suggested that patients with large amounts of tophi aren’t really in remission. “I think we do need to be thinking about the disease, not just in terms of just crystals or just inflammation, but actually trying to integrate both of those, and I think this is where these composite measures might work quite well. I think we need to be aiming for holistic disease control, which is essentially what this is,” she said. 

Tabi-Amponsah and Dalbeth did not disclose any financial relationships. 

 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

In a nearly unanimous vote at the annual research symposium of the Gout Hyperuricemia and Crystal-Associated Disease Network (G-CAN), members approved a revision to gout remission criteria first established in 2016. The new version simplifies the definition in response to patient comments that the earlier version was redundant in some areas. 

The previous version was developed following deliberations by 49 clinicians and researchers with experience in gout. They settled on a definition of gout remission that included five criteria:

  • Serum urate levels lower than 0.36 mmol/L measured at least twice over 12 months, with no intervening values of 0.36 mmol/L or higher
  • No gout flares over 12 months
  • No tophi
  • Pain score due to gout < 2 at least twice over 12 months on a 10-point Likert scale or 10-cm visual analog scale, with no intervening values ≥ 2
  • Patient global assessment of gout disease activity < 2 on a 10-point Likert scale or 10-cm visual analog scale, with no intervening values of ≥ 2.

Some participants reported that patients sometimes misattributed pain from other sources while using patient-reported outcomes (PROs). The argument for keeping PROs was that they are validated measures and endorsed by Outcome Measures in Rheumatology. Nevertheless, there was no direct patient involvement in the development of the 2016 criteria.

Researchers later interviewed 20 individuals with well-controlled gout to get their feedback on the 2016 criteria. Those individuals endorsed the existing criteria and did not suggest any new ones, but they suggested that the pain due to gout and the absence of gout flares were redundant measures. One said: “If you have no flare-ups, you’ve got no pain; it sort of answers itself.”

“That was a bit challenging for us because it wasn’t quite what we expected, but I think it did make us look again at the definition and think about whether we could simplify the definition further,” Nicola Dalbeth, MBChB, said during a presentation at G-CAN. Dalbeth is an academic rheumatologist at the University of Auckland, in New Zealand, who was also the lead author of the original criteria.

 

Simplified Version Created With Only Three Criteria

In response to these points, researchers produced a revised version with only three criteria, including the serum urate, absence of gout flares, and absence of subcutaneous tophi at the time of assessment.

To determine if the simplified criteria performed well, they compared the original and revised remission criteria in the context of the CARES trial, the Nottingham nurse-led trial, and randomized controlled trials in patients with gout that were conducted in New Zealand (here and here).

Dansoa Tabi-Amponsah, a PhD candidate at the University of Auckland, presented results of a study comparing the two versions in the Nottingham trial, which included 517 participants who received nurse-led or usual general practitioner care. The nurse-led care included education, regular follow-up and serum urate testing, individualized advice on gout flare management, and escalation of urate-lowering therapy with a treat-to-target strategy.

Both definitions demonstrated a link between the nurse-led strategy and increased rates of remission at year 1 and year 2, although the simplified definition found that more patients were in remission (17.6% vs 9.9% at year 1 and 42.7% vs 28.4% at year 2, both P < .001). “This is something we’ve seen across all of our analyses,” said Tabi-Amponsah. 

Both criteria also found significant differences in remission rates between the nurse-led group in year 2 vs year 1 but not in the usual care group.

Participants who achieved remission had better gout impact scale scores in areas like worrying that a gout attack will occur, fears of worsening gout, and concerns about the impact of gout on future activities. “This is important because during that qualitative study, a key aspect of being in remission was no longer being worried about their gout, no longer feeling anxious about having constant gout flares, and having control over their gout. So, it’s important to note that despite the absence of PROs in that simplified definition, it’s still able to align with the patients’ perspectives of their disease state,” said Tabi-Amponsah.

During the Q&A period after her talk, an audience member asked whether the higher rate of remission found by the simplified criteria is actually a good thing. “If I compare that to rheumatoid arthritis, when you use DAS28 you have a lot more remission, but still progression. So, are we missing some people? Are we including people in remission that still have disease?” she asked. 

Tabi-Amponsah responded that the pain and patient global assessment domains seem to be quite difficult to achieve. In a separate analysis, the researchers examined tender and swollen joint counts and found that those achieving remission no longer had tender or swollen joints. “So, we don’t think the simplified definition is heavily misclassifying anyone as being in remission,” she said. 

During the Q&A following Dalbeth’s talk, an audience member asked about patients with what he described as “mountains of tophi,” despite responding well to uricase therapy. “They may take months or even a year to really resolve that burden. They may be doing very well, yet they’re not going to be in remission because they’ve still got visible tophi. So, are we underselling them, and do we need a different definition for them doing well that this doesn’t capture?” he asked.

Dalbeth suggested that patients with large amounts of tophi aren’t really in remission. “I think we do need to be thinking about the disease, not just in terms of just crystals or just inflammation, but actually trying to integrate both of those, and I think this is where these composite measures might work quite well. I think we need to be aiming for holistic disease control, which is essentially what this is,” she said. 

Tabi-Amponsah and Dalbeth did not disclose any financial relationships. 

 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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