1. Flare Rate Thresholds for Patient Assessment of Disease Activity States in Gout.
- Author
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Taylor W, Dalbeth N, Saag KG, Singh JA, Rahn EJ, Mudano AS, Chen YH, Lin CT, Tan P, Louthreno W, Vazquez-Mellado J, Hernández-Llinas H, Neogi T, Vargas-Santos AB, Castelar-Pinheiro G, Chaves-Amorim RB, Uhlig T, Hammer HB, Eliseev M, Perez-Ruiz F, Cavagna L, McCarthy GM, Stamp LK, Gerritsen M, Fana V, Sivera F, and Gaffo AL
- Subjects
- Humans, Needs Assessment, Self Report, Symptom Flare Up, Gout drug therapy
- Abstract
Objective: To determine the relationship between gout flare rate and self-categorization into remission, low disease activity (LDA), and patient acceptable symptom state (PASS)., Methods: Patients with gout self-categorized as remission, LDA, and PASS, and reported number of flares over the preceding 6 and 12 months. Multinomial logistic regression was used to determine the association between being in each disease state (LDA and PASS were combined) and flare count, and self-reported current flare. A distribution-based approach and extended Youden index identified possible flare count thresholds for each state., Results: Investigators from 17 countries recruited 512 participants. Remission was associated with a median recalled flare count of zero over both 6 and 12 months. Each recalled flare reduced the likelihood of self-perceived remission compared with being in higher disease activity than LDA/PASS, by 52% for 6 months and 23% for 12 months, and the likelihood of self-perceived LDA/PASS by 15% and 5% for 6 and 12 months, respectively. A threshold of 0 flares in preceding 6 and 12 months was associated with correct classification of self-perceived remission in 58% and 56% of cases, respectively., Conclusion: Flares are significantly associated with perceptions of disease activity in gout, and no flares over the prior 6 or 12 months is necessary for most people to self-categorize as being in remission. However, recalled flare counts alone do not correctly classify all patients into self-categorized disease activity states, suggesting that other factors may also contribute to self-perceived gout disease activity., (Copyright © 2021 by the Journal of Rheumatology.)
- Published
- 2021
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