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Gout too often treated only in emergency department

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Only about one in three patients seen in the emergency department of an academic health system for acute gout had a follow-up visit that addressed this condition, Lesley Jackson, MD, of the University of Alabama at Birmingham, reported at the annual research symposium of the Gout, Hyperuricemia, and Crystal Associated Disease Network (G-CAN).

Dr. Jackson presented research done on patients seen within her university’s health system, looking at 72 patients seen in the ED between September 2021 and February 2022. Medications prescribed at discharge from the ED included corticosteroids (46 patients, or 64%), opioids (45 patients, 63%), NSAIDs (31 patients, 43%), and colchicine (23 patients, 32%).

Only 26 patients, or about 36%, had a subsequent outpatient visit in the UAB health system addressing gout, she said. Of 33 patients with any outpatient follow-up visit within the UAB system, 21 were within 1 month after the index ED visit, followed by 3 more prior to 3 months, and 9 more after 3 months.

The limitations of the study includes its collection of data from a single institution. But the results highlight the need for improved quality of care for gout, with too many people being treated for this condition primarily in the ED, she said.

In an email exchange arranged by the Arthritis Foundation, Herbert S. B. Baraf, MD, said he agreed that patients too often limit their treatment for gout to seeking care for acute attacks in the ED.

Because of competing demands, physicians working there are more to take a “Band-Aid” approach and not impress upon patients that gout is a lifelong condition that needs follow-up and monitoring, said Dr. Baraf, clinical professor of medicine at George Washington University, Washington, and an associate clinical professor at the University of Maryland, Baltimore. He retired from private practice in 2022.

“This problem is akin to the patient who has a hip fracture due to osteoporosis who gets a surgical repair but is never referred for osteoporotic management,” wrote Dr. Baraf, who is a former board member of the Arthritis Foundation.

He suggested viewing gout as a form of arthritis that has two components.

“The first, that which brings the patient to seek medical care, is the often exquisitely painful attack of pain and swelling in a joint or joints that comes on acutely,” he wrote. “Calming these attacks are the focus of the patient and the doctor, who does the evaluation as relief of pain and inflammation is the most pressing task at hand.”

But equally important is the second element, addressing the cause of these flare ups of arthritis, he wrote. Elevated uric acid leads to crystalline deposits of urate in the joints, particularly in the feet, ankles, knees, and hands. Over time, these deposits generate seemingly random flare ups of acute joint pain in one or more of these areas.

“Thus, when a patient presents to an emergency room with a first or second attack of gout, pain relief is the primary focus of the visit,” Dr. Baraf wrote. “But if over time that is the only focus, and the elevation of serum uric acid is not addressed, deposits will continue to mount and flare ups will occur with increasing frequency and severity.”

This study was supported by a grant from the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases. Dr. Jackson has no relevant financial disclosures.

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Only about one in three patients seen in the emergency department of an academic health system for acute gout had a follow-up visit that addressed this condition, Lesley Jackson, MD, of the University of Alabama at Birmingham, reported at the annual research symposium of the Gout, Hyperuricemia, and Crystal Associated Disease Network (G-CAN).

Dr. Jackson presented research done on patients seen within her university’s health system, looking at 72 patients seen in the ED between September 2021 and February 2022. Medications prescribed at discharge from the ED included corticosteroids (46 patients, or 64%), opioids (45 patients, 63%), NSAIDs (31 patients, 43%), and colchicine (23 patients, 32%).

Only 26 patients, or about 36%, had a subsequent outpatient visit in the UAB health system addressing gout, she said. Of 33 patients with any outpatient follow-up visit within the UAB system, 21 were within 1 month after the index ED visit, followed by 3 more prior to 3 months, and 9 more after 3 months.

The limitations of the study includes its collection of data from a single institution. But the results highlight the need for improved quality of care for gout, with too many people being treated for this condition primarily in the ED, she said.

In an email exchange arranged by the Arthritis Foundation, Herbert S. B. Baraf, MD, said he agreed that patients too often limit their treatment for gout to seeking care for acute attacks in the ED.

Because of competing demands, physicians working there are more to take a “Band-Aid” approach and not impress upon patients that gout is a lifelong condition that needs follow-up and monitoring, said Dr. Baraf, clinical professor of medicine at George Washington University, Washington, and an associate clinical professor at the University of Maryland, Baltimore. He retired from private practice in 2022.

“This problem is akin to the patient who has a hip fracture due to osteoporosis who gets a surgical repair but is never referred for osteoporotic management,” wrote Dr. Baraf, who is a former board member of the Arthritis Foundation.

He suggested viewing gout as a form of arthritis that has two components.

“The first, that which brings the patient to seek medical care, is the often exquisitely painful attack of pain and swelling in a joint or joints that comes on acutely,” he wrote. “Calming these attacks are the focus of the patient and the doctor, who does the evaluation as relief of pain and inflammation is the most pressing task at hand.”

But equally important is the second element, addressing the cause of these flare ups of arthritis, he wrote. Elevated uric acid leads to crystalline deposits of urate in the joints, particularly in the feet, ankles, knees, and hands. Over time, these deposits generate seemingly random flare ups of acute joint pain in one or more of these areas.

“Thus, when a patient presents to an emergency room with a first or second attack of gout, pain relief is the primary focus of the visit,” Dr. Baraf wrote. “But if over time that is the only focus, and the elevation of serum uric acid is not addressed, deposits will continue to mount and flare ups will occur with increasing frequency and severity.”

This study was supported by a grant from the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases. Dr. Jackson has no relevant financial disclosures.

Only about one in three patients seen in the emergency department of an academic health system for acute gout had a follow-up visit that addressed this condition, Lesley Jackson, MD, of the University of Alabama at Birmingham, reported at the annual research symposium of the Gout, Hyperuricemia, and Crystal Associated Disease Network (G-CAN).

Dr. Jackson presented research done on patients seen within her university’s health system, looking at 72 patients seen in the ED between September 2021 and February 2022. Medications prescribed at discharge from the ED included corticosteroids (46 patients, or 64%), opioids (45 patients, 63%), NSAIDs (31 patients, 43%), and colchicine (23 patients, 32%).

Only 26 patients, or about 36%, had a subsequent outpatient visit in the UAB health system addressing gout, she said. Of 33 patients with any outpatient follow-up visit within the UAB system, 21 were within 1 month after the index ED visit, followed by 3 more prior to 3 months, and 9 more after 3 months.

The limitations of the study includes its collection of data from a single institution. But the results highlight the need for improved quality of care for gout, with too many people being treated for this condition primarily in the ED, she said.

In an email exchange arranged by the Arthritis Foundation, Herbert S. B. Baraf, MD, said he agreed that patients too often limit their treatment for gout to seeking care for acute attacks in the ED.

Because of competing demands, physicians working there are more to take a “Band-Aid” approach and not impress upon patients that gout is a lifelong condition that needs follow-up and monitoring, said Dr. Baraf, clinical professor of medicine at George Washington University, Washington, and an associate clinical professor at the University of Maryland, Baltimore. He retired from private practice in 2022.

“This problem is akin to the patient who has a hip fracture due to osteoporosis who gets a surgical repair but is never referred for osteoporotic management,” wrote Dr. Baraf, who is a former board member of the Arthritis Foundation.

He suggested viewing gout as a form of arthritis that has two components.

“The first, that which brings the patient to seek medical care, is the often exquisitely painful attack of pain and swelling in a joint or joints that comes on acutely,” he wrote. “Calming these attacks are the focus of the patient and the doctor, who does the evaluation as relief of pain and inflammation is the most pressing task at hand.”

But equally important is the second element, addressing the cause of these flare ups of arthritis, he wrote. Elevated uric acid leads to crystalline deposits of urate in the joints, particularly in the feet, ankles, knees, and hands. Over time, these deposits generate seemingly random flare ups of acute joint pain in one or more of these areas.

“Thus, when a patient presents to an emergency room with a first or second attack of gout, pain relief is the primary focus of the visit,” Dr. Baraf wrote. “But if over time that is the only focus, and the elevation of serum uric acid is not addressed, deposits will continue to mount and flare ups will occur with increasing frequency and severity.”

This study was supported by a grant from the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases. Dr. Jackson has no relevant financial disclosures.

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Poor control of serum urate linked to cardiovascular risk in patients with gout

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Wed, 11/02/2022 - 15:01

A new study based on U.S. veterans’ medical records adds to the evidence for a link between gout – especially poorly controlled cases – and cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk, Tate Johnson, MD, reported at the annual research symposium of the Gout, Hyperuricemia, and Crystal Associated Disease Network.

Gout was associated with a 68% increased risk of heart failure (HF) hospitalization, 25% increased risk of HF-related death, and a 22% increased risk of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE), said Dr. Johnson, of the division of rheumatology at the University of Nebraska, Omaha.

Poorly controlled serum urate was associated with a higher risk of cardiovascular events, regardless of the use of urate-lowering therapy (ULT). He said more research is needed to see if there is a causal link between gout, hyperuricemia – or its treatment – and CVD risk.

Dr. Tate Johnson

Dr. Johnson and colleagues used records from the Veterans Health Administration for this study. They created a retrospective, matched cohort study that looked at records dating from January 1999 to September 2015. Patients with gout (≥ 2 ICD-9 codes) were matched 1:10 on age, sex, and year of VHA enrollment to patients without a gout ICD-9 code or a record of receiving ULT. They matched 559,243 people with gout to 5,407,379 people who did not have a diagnosis or a recorded treatment for this condition.

Over 43,331,604 person-years, Dr. Johnson and colleagues observed 137,162 CVD events in gout (incidence rate 33.96 per 1,000 person-years) vs. 879,903 in non-gout patients (IR 22.37 per 1,000 person-years). Gout was most strongly associated with HF hospitalization, with a nearly threefold higher risk (hazard ratio, 2.78; 95% confidence interval, 2.73-2.83), which attenuated but persisted after adjustment for additional CVD risk factors (adjusted hazard ratio, 1.68; 95% CI, 1.65-1.70) and excluding patients with prevalent HF (aHR, 1.60; 95% CI, 1.57-1.64).

People with gout were also at higher risk of HF-related death (aHR, 1.25; 95% CI, 1.21-1.29), MACE (aHR, 1.22; 95% CI, 1.21-1.23), and coronary artery disease–related death (aHR, 1.21; 95% CI, 1.20-1.22).

Among people with gout in the study, poor serum urate control was associated with a higher risk of all CVD events, with the highest CVD risk occurring in patients with inadequately controlled serum urate despite receipt of ULT, particularly related to HF hospitalization (aHR, 1.43; 95% CI, 1.34-1.52) and HF-related death (aHR, 1.47; 95% CI, 1.34-1.61).

Limits of the study include the generalizability of the study population. Reflecting the VHA’s patient population, 99% of the cohort were men, with 62% of the gout group and 59.4% of the control group identifying as White and non-Hispanic.



The study provides evidence that may be found only by studying medical records, Richard J. Johnson, MD, of the University of Colorado at Denver, Aurora, said in an interview.

Dr. Richard Johnson, who is not related to the author, said that only about one-third of people with gout are adequately treated, and about another one-third take urate-lowering therapy (ULT) but fail to get their serum urate level under control. But it would be unethical to design a clinical trial to study CVD risk and poorly controlled serum urate without ULT treatment.

“The only way you can figure out if uric acid lowering is going to help these guys is to actually do a study like this where you see the ones who don’t get adequate treatment versus adequate treatment and you show that there’s going to be a difference in outcome,” he said.

Dr. Richard Johnson contrasted this approach with the one used in the recently reported study that appeared to cast doubt on the link between serum uric acid levels and cardiovascular disease. The ALL-HEART trial found that allopurinol, a drug commonly used to treat gout, provided no benefit in terms of reducing cardiovascular events in patients with ischemic heart disease. But these patients did not have gout, and that was a critical difference, he said.

He noted that it was not surprising that the results of ALL-HEART were negative, given the study design.

“The ALL-HEART study treated people regardless of their uric acid level, and they also excluded subjects who had a history of gout,” he said. “Yet the risk associated with uric acid occurs primarily among those with elevated serum uric acid levels and those with gout.”

The study received funding from the Rheumatology Research Foundation and the VHA. Neither Dr. Tate Johnson nor Dr. Richard Johnson had any relevant disclosures.

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A new study based on U.S. veterans’ medical records adds to the evidence for a link between gout – especially poorly controlled cases – and cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk, Tate Johnson, MD, reported at the annual research symposium of the Gout, Hyperuricemia, and Crystal Associated Disease Network.

Gout was associated with a 68% increased risk of heart failure (HF) hospitalization, 25% increased risk of HF-related death, and a 22% increased risk of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE), said Dr. Johnson, of the division of rheumatology at the University of Nebraska, Omaha.

Poorly controlled serum urate was associated with a higher risk of cardiovascular events, regardless of the use of urate-lowering therapy (ULT). He said more research is needed to see if there is a causal link between gout, hyperuricemia – or its treatment – and CVD risk.

Dr. Tate Johnson

Dr. Johnson and colleagues used records from the Veterans Health Administration for this study. They created a retrospective, matched cohort study that looked at records dating from January 1999 to September 2015. Patients with gout (≥ 2 ICD-9 codes) were matched 1:10 on age, sex, and year of VHA enrollment to patients without a gout ICD-9 code or a record of receiving ULT. They matched 559,243 people with gout to 5,407,379 people who did not have a diagnosis or a recorded treatment for this condition.

Over 43,331,604 person-years, Dr. Johnson and colleagues observed 137,162 CVD events in gout (incidence rate 33.96 per 1,000 person-years) vs. 879,903 in non-gout patients (IR 22.37 per 1,000 person-years). Gout was most strongly associated with HF hospitalization, with a nearly threefold higher risk (hazard ratio, 2.78; 95% confidence interval, 2.73-2.83), which attenuated but persisted after adjustment for additional CVD risk factors (adjusted hazard ratio, 1.68; 95% CI, 1.65-1.70) and excluding patients with prevalent HF (aHR, 1.60; 95% CI, 1.57-1.64).

People with gout were also at higher risk of HF-related death (aHR, 1.25; 95% CI, 1.21-1.29), MACE (aHR, 1.22; 95% CI, 1.21-1.23), and coronary artery disease–related death (aHR, 1.21; 95% CI, 1.20-1.22).

Among people with gout in the study, poor serum urate control was associated with a higher risk of all CVD events, with the highest CVD risk occurring in patients with inadequately controlled serum urate despite receipt of ULT, particularly related to HF hospitalization (aHR, 1.43; 95% CI, 1.34-1.52) and HF-related death (aHR, 1.47; 95% CI, 1.34-1.61).

Limits of the study include the generalizability of the study population. Reflecting the VHA’s patient population, 99% of the cohort were men, with 62% of the gout group and 59.4% of the control group identifying as White and non-Hispanic.



The study provides evidence that may be found only by studying medical records, Richard J. Johnson, MD, of the University of Colorado at Denver, Aurora, said in an interview.

Dr. Richard Johnson, who is not related to the author, said that only about one-third of people with gout are adequately treated, and about another one-third take urate-lowering therapy (ULT) but fail to get their serum urate level under control. But it would be unethical to design a clinical trial to study CVD risk and poorly controlled serum urate without ULT treatment.

“The only way you can figure out if uric acid lowering is going to help these guys is to actually do a study like this where you see the ones who don’t get adequate treatment versus adequate treatment and you show that there’s going to be a difference in outcome,” he said.

Dr. Richard Johnson contrasted this approach with the one used in the recently reported study that appeared to cast doubt on the link between serum uric acid levels and cardiovascular disease. The ALL-HEART trial found that allopurinol, a drug commonly used to treat gout, provided no benefit in terms of reducing cardiovascular events in patients with ischemic heart disease. But these patients did not have gout, and that was a critical difference, he said.

He noted that it was not surprising that the results of ALL-HEART were negative, given the study design.

“The ALL-HEART study treated people regardless of their uric acid level, and they also excluded subjects who had a history of gout,” he said. “Yet the risk associated with uric acid occurs primarily among those with elevated serum uric acid levels and those with gout.”

The study received funding from the Rheumatology Research Foundation and the VHA. Neither Dr. Tate Johnson nor Dr. Richard Johnson had any relevant disclosures.

A new study based on U.S. veterans’ medical records adds to the evidence for a link between gout – especially poorly controlled cases – and cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk, Tate Johnson, MD, reported at the annual research symposium of the Gout, Hyperuricemia, and Crystal Associated Disease Network.

Gout was associated with a 68% increased risk of heart failure (HF) hospitalization, 25% increased risk of HF-related death, and a 22% increased risk of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE), said Dr. Johnson, of the division of rheumatology at the University of Nebraska, Omaha.

Poorly controlled serum urate was associated with a higher risk of cardiovascular events, regardless of the use of urate-lowering therapy (ULT). He said more research is needed to see if there is a causal link between gout, hyperuricemia – or its treatment – and CVD risk.

Dr. Tate Johnson

Dr. Johnson and colleagues used records from the Veterans Health Administration for this study. They created a retrospective, matched cohort study that looked at records dating from January 1999 to September 2015. Patients with gout (≥ 2 ICD-9 codes) were matched 1:10 on age, sex, and year of VHA enrollment to patients without a gout ICD-9 code or a record of receiving ULT. They matched 559,243 people with gout to 5,407,379 people who did not have a diagnosis or a recorded treatment for this condition.

Over 43,331,604 person-years, Dr. Johnson and colleagues observed 137,162 CVD events in gout (incidence rate 33.96 per 1,000 person-years) vs. 879,903 in non-gout patients (IR 22.37 per 1,000 person-years). Gout was most strongly associated with HF hospitalization, with a nearly threefold higher risk (hazard ratio, 2.78; 95% confidence interval, 2.73-2.83), which attenuated but persisted after adjustment for additional CVD risk factors (adjusted hazard ratio, 1.68; 95% CI, 1.65-1.70) and excluding patients with prevalent HF (aHR, 1.60; 95% CI, 1.57-1.64).

People with gout were also at higher risk of HF-related death (aHR, 1.25; 95% CI, 1.21-1.29), MACE (aHR, 1.22; 95% CI, 1.21-1.23), and coronary artery disease–related death (aHR, 1.21; 95% CI, 1.20-1.22).

Among people with gout in the study, poor serum urate control was associated with a higher risk of all CVD events, with the highest CVD risk occurring in patients with inadequately controlled serum urate despite receipt of ULT, particularly related to HF hospitalization (aHR, 1.43; 95% CI, 1.34-1.52) and HF-related death (aHR, 1.47; 95% CI, 1.34-1.61).

Limits of the study include the generalizability of the study population. Reflecting the VHA’s patient population, 99% of the cohort were men, with 62% of the gout group and 59.4% of the control group identifying as White and non-Hispanic.



The study provides evidence that may be found only by studying medical records, Richard J. Johnson, MD, of the University of Colorado at Denver, Aurora, said in an interview.

Dr. Richard Johnson, who is not related to the author, said that only about one-third of people with gout are adequately treated, and about another one-third take urate-lowering therapy (ULT) but fail to get their serum urate level under control. But it would be unethical to design a clinical trial to study CVD risk and poorly controlled serum urate without ULT treatment.

“The only way you can figure out if uric acid lowering is going to help these guys is to actually do a study like this where you see the ones who don’t get adequate treatment versus adequate treatment and you show that there’s going to be a difference in outcome,” he said.

Dr. Richard Johnson contrasted this approach with the one used in the recently reported study that appeared to cast doubt on the link between serum uric acid levels and cardiovascular disease. The ALL-HEART trial found that allopurinol, a drug commonly used to treat gout, provided no benefit in terms of reducing cardiovascular events in patients with ischemic heart disease. But these patients did not have gout, and that was a critical difference, he said.

He noted that it was not surprising that the results of ALL-HEART were negative, given the study design.

“The ALL-HEART study treated people regardless of their uric acid level, and they also excluded subjects who had a history of gout,” he said. “Yet the risk associated with uric acid occurs primarily among those with elevated serum uric acid levels and those with gout.”

The study received funding from the Rheumatology Research Foundation and the VHA. Neither Dr. Tate Johnson nor Dr. Richard Johnson had any relevant disclosures.

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Research ties gout in women to comorbidities more than genetics

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Mon, 10/31/2022 - 13:01

Comorbidities may play a greater role than genetics women with gout, although this appears not to be true for men, Nicholas Sumpter, MSc, of the University of Alabama at Birmingham said at the annual research symposium of the Gout, Hyperuricemia, and Crystal Associated Disease Network (G-CAN).

Mr. Sumpter was among the authors of a recent paper in Arthritis & Rheumatology that suggested that earlier gout onset involves the accumulation of certain allelic variants in men. This genetic risk was shared across multiple ancestral groups in the study, conducted with men of European and Polynesian ancestry, Mr. Sumpter and colleagues reported.

“There might be more than one factor in gout in men, but in women we’ve been getting at this idea that comorbidities are the big thing,” he said.

During his presentation, Mr. Sumpter offered a hypothesis that in men there might be a kind of “two-pronged attack,” with increases in serum urate linked to genetic risk, but comorbidities also playing a role. “But that may not be the case for women.”

In his presentation, Mr. Sumpter noted a paper published in March 2022 from his University of Alabama at Birmingham colleagues, Aakash V. Patel, MD, and Angelo L. Gaffo, MD. In the article, Dr. Patel and Dr. Gaffo delved into the challenges of treating women with gout given “the paucity of appropriately well-powered, randomized-controlled trials investigating the efficacy” of commonly used treatments.



“This poses major challenges for the management of female gout patients since they carry a greater burden of cardiovascular and renal morbidity, which is known to modulate the pathophysiology of gout; as such, conclusions regarding the efficacy of treatments for females cannot be extrapolated from investigative studies that are predominantly male,” they wrote, calling for increased efforts to enroll women in studies of treatments for this condition.

There’s increased interest in how gout affects women, including findings in a paper published in September in Arthritis & Rheumatology that found people with gout, especially women, appear to be at higher risk for poor COVID-19 outcomes, including hospitalization and death, regardless of COVID-19 vaccination status.

Gout has become more common in women, although this remains a condition that is far more likely to strike men.

The age-standardized prevalence of gout among women rose from 233.52 per 100,000 in 1990 to 253.49 in 2017, a gain of about 9%, according to a systematic analysis of the Global Burden of Disease Study.

That topped the roughly 5% gain seen for men in the same time frame, with the rate going from 747.48 per 100,000 to 790.90. With the aging of the global population, gout’s burden in terms of prevalence and disability is expected to increase.

Impact of obesity and healthy eating patterns

Obesity, or excess adiposity, appears to be of particular concern for women in terms of gout risk.

While obesity and genetic predisposition both are strongly associated with a higher risk of gout, the excess risk of both combined was higher than the sum of each, particularly among women, Natalie McCormick, PhD, of Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, and coauthors reported in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases.

These findings suggested that “addressing excess adiposity could prevent a large proportion of female gout cases in particular, as well as its cardiometabolic comorbidities, and the benefit could be greater in genetically predisposed women,” they wrote.

In general, there’s a need to re-examine the advice given by many clinicians in the past that people with gout, or those at risk for it, should follow a low-protein diet to avoid purines, Dr. McCormick said in an interview.



“Now we’re finding that a healthier diet that balances protein as well as fat intake can actually be better both for cardiovascular health and for gout prevention,” she said.

Dr. McCormick’s research on this topic includes a 2022 JAMA Internal Medicine article, and a 2021 article in Current Rheumatology Reports. In the latter article, Dr. McCormick and colleagues examined the benefits of changing habits for patients, such as following one of several well-established healthy eating patterns, including the Mediterranean and DASH diets.

With excess weight and associated cardiovascular and endocrine risks already elevated among people with gout, especially women, the “conventional low-purine (i.e., low-protein) approach to gout dietary guidance is neither helpful nor sustainable and may lead to detrimental effects related to worsening insulin resistance as a result of substitution of healthy proteins with unhealthy carbohydrates or fats,” they wrote. “Rather, by focusing our dietary recommendations on healthy eating patterns which have been proven to reduce cardiometabolic risk factors, as opposed to singular ‘good’ or ‘bad’ food items or groups, the beneficial effects of such diets on relevant gout endpoints should naturally follow for the majority of typical gout cases, mediated through changes in insulin resistance.”

Mr. Sumpter and Dr. McCormick had no competing interests to declare.

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Comorbidities may play a greater role than genetics women with gout, although this appears not to be true for men, Nicholas Sumpter, MSc, of the University of Alabama at Birmingham said at the annual research symposium of the Gout, Hyperuricemia, and Crystal Associated Disease Network (G-CAN).

Mr. Sumpter was among the authors of a recent paper in Arthritis & Rheumatology that suggested that earlier gout onset involves the accumulation of certain allelic variants in men. This genetic risk was shared across multiple ancestral groups in the study, conducted with men of European and Polynesian ancestry, Mr. Sumpter and colleagues reported.

“There might be more than one factor in gout in men, but in women we’ve been getting at this idea that comorbidities are the big thing,” he said.

During his presentation, Mr. Sumpter offered a hypothesis that in men there might be a kind of “two-pronged attack,” with increases in serum urate linked to genetic risk, but comorbidities also playing a role. “But that may not be the case for women.”

In his presentation, Mr. Sumpter noted a paper published in March 2022 from his University of Alabama at Birmingham colleagues, Aakash V. Patel, MD, and Angelo L. Gaffo, MD. In the article, Dr. Patel and Dr. Gaffo delved into the challenges of treating women with gout given “the paucity of appropriately well-powered, randomized-controlled trials investigating the efficacy” of commonly used treatments.



“This poses major challenges for the management of female gout patients since they carry a greater burden of cardiovascular and renal morbidity, which is known to modulate the pathophysiology of gout; as such, conclusions regarding the efficacy of treatments for females cannot be extrapolated from investigative studies that are predominantly male,” they wrote, calling for increased efforts to enroll women in studies of treatments for this condition.

There’s increased interest in how gout affects women, including findings in a paper published in September in Arthritis & Rheumatology that found people with gout, especially women, appear to be at higher risk for poor COVID-19 outcomes, including hospitalization and death, regardless of COVID-19 vaccination status.

Gout has become more common in women, although this remains a condition that is far more likely to strike men.

The age-standardized prevalence of gout among women rose from 233.52 per 100,000 in 1990 to 253.49 in 2017, a gain of about 9%, according to a systematic analysis of the Global Burden of Disease Study.

That topped the roughly 5% gain seen for men in the same time frame, with the rate going from 747.48 per 100,000 to 790.90. With the aging of the global population, gout’s burden in terms of prevalence and disability is expected to increase.

Impact of obesity and healthy eating patterns

Obesity, or excess adiposity, appears to be of particular concern for women in terms of gout risk.

While obesity and genetic predisposition both are strongly associated with a higher risk of gout, the excess risk of both combined was higher than the sum of each, particularly among women, Natalie McCormick, PhD, of Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, and coauthors reported in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases.

These findings suggested that “addressing excess adiposity could prevent a large proportion of female gout cases in particular, as well as its cardiometabolic comorbidities, and the benefit could be greater in genetically predisposed women,” they wrote.

In general, there’s a need to re-examine the advice given by many clinicians in the past that people with gout, or those at risk for it, should follow a low-protein diet to avoid purines, Dr. McCormick said in an interview.



“Now we’re finding that a healthier diet that balances protein as well as fat intake can actually be better both for cardiovascular health and for gout prevention,” she said.

Dr. McCormick’s research on this topic includes a 2022 JAMA Internal Medicine article, and a 2021 article in Current Rheumatology Reports. In the latter article, Dr. McCormick and colleagues examined the benefits of changing habits for patients, such as following one of several well-established healthy eating patterns, including the Mediterranean and DASH diets.

With excess weight and associated cardiovascular and endocrine risks already elevated among people with gout, especially women, the “conventional low-purine (i.e., low-protein) approach to gout dietary guidance is neither helpful nor sustainable and may lead to detrimental effects related to worsening insulin resistance as a result of substitution of healthy proteins with unhealthy carbohydrates or fats,” they wrote. “Rather, by focusing our dietary recommendations on healthy eating patterns which have been proven to reduce cardiometabolic risk factors, as opposed to singular ‘good’ or ‘bad’ food items or groups, the beneficial effects of such diets on relevant gout endpoints should naturally follow for the majority of typical gout cases, mediated through changes in insulin resistance.”

Mr. Sumpter and Dr. McCormick had no competing interests to declare.

Comorbidities may play a greater role than genetics women with gout, although this appears not to be true for men, Nicholas Sumpter, MSc, of the University of Alabama at Birmingham said at the annual research symposium of the Gout, Hyperuricemia, and Crystal Associated Disease Network (G-CAN).

Mr. Sumpter was among the authors of a recent paper in Arthritis & Rheumatology that suggested that earlier gout onset involves the accumulation of certain allelic variants in men. This genetic risk was shared across multiple ancestral groups in the study, conducted with men of European and Polynesian ancestry, Mr. Sumpter and colleagues reported.

“There might be more than one factor in gout in men, but in women we’ve been getting at this idea that comorbidities are the big thing,” he said.

During his presentation, Mr. Sumpter offered a hypothesis that in men there might be a kind of “two-pronged attack,” with increases in serum urate linked to genetic risk, but comorbidities also playing a role. “But that may not be the case for women.”

In his presentation, Mr. Sumpter noted a paper published in March 2022 from his University of Alabama at Birmingham colleagues, Aakash V. Patel, MD, and Angelo L. Gaffo, MD. In the article, Dr. Patel and Dr. Gaffo delved into the challenges of treating women with gout given “the paucity of appropriately well-powered, randomized-controlled trials investigating the efficacy” of commonly used treatments.



“This poses major challenges for the management of female gout patients since they carry a greater burden of cardiovascular and renal morbidity, which is known to modulate the pathophysiology of gout; as such, conclusions regarding the efficacy of treatments for females cannot be extrapolated from investigative studies that are predominantly male,” they wrote, calling for increased efforts to enroll women in studies of treatments for this condition.

There’s increased interest in how gout affects women, including findings in a paper published in September in Arthritis & Rheumatology that found people with gout, especially women, appear to be at higher risk for poor COVID-19 outcomes, including hospitalization and death, regardless of COVID-19 vaccination status.

Gout has become more common in women, although this remains a condition that is far more likely to strike men.

The age-standardized prevalence of gout among women rose from 233.52 per 100,000 in 1990 to 253.49 in 2017, a gain of about 9%, according to a systematic analysis of the Global Burden of Disease Study.

That topped the roughly 5% gain seen for men in the same time frame, with the rate going from 747.48 per 100,000 to 790.90. With the aging of the global population, gout’s burden in terms of prevalence and disability is expected to increase.

Impact of obesity and healthy eating patterns

Obesity, or excess adiposity, appears to be of particular concern for women in terms of gout risk.

While obesity and genetic predisposition both are strongly associated with a higher risk of gout, the excess risk of both combined was higher than the sum of each, particularly among women, Natalie McCormick, PhD, of Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, and coauthors reported in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases.

These findings suggested that “addressing excess adiposity could prevent a large proportion of female gout cases in particular, as well as its cardiometabolic comorbidities, and the benefit could be greater in genetically predisposed women,” they wrote.

In general, there’s a need to re-examine the advice given by many clinicians in the past that people with gout, or those at risk for it, should follow a low-protein diet to avoid purines, Dr. McCormick said in an interview.



“Now we’re finding that a healthier diet that balances protein as well as fat intake can actually be better both for cardiovascular health and for gout prevention,” she said.

Dr. McCormick’s research on this topic includes a 2022 JAMA Internal Medicine article, and a 2021 article in Current Rheumatology Reports. In the latter article, Dr. McCormick and colleagues examined the benefits of changing habits for patients, such as following one of several well-established healthy eating patterns, including the Mediterranean and DASH diets.

With excess weight and associated cardiovascular and endocrine risks already elevated among people with gout, especially women, the “conventional low-purine (i.e., low-protein) approach to gout dietary guidance is neither helpful nor sustainable and may lead to detrimental effects related to worsening insulin resistance as a result of substitution of healthy proteins with unhealthy carbohydrates or fats,” they wrote. “Rather, by focusing our dietary recommendations on healthy eating patterns which have been proven to reduce cardiometabolic risk factors, as opposed to singular ‘good’ or ‘bad’ food items or groups, the beneficial effects of such diets on relevant gout endpoints should naturally follow for the majority of typical gout cases, mediated through changes in insulin resistance.”

Mr. Sumpter and Dr. McCormick had no competing interests to declare.

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