257 results on '"Crystal Arthropathies"'
Search Results
2. Chances and challenges of photon-counting CT in musculoskeletal imaging.
- Author
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Mourad, Charbel, Gallego Manzano, Lucia, Viry, Anaïs, Booij, Ronald, Oei, Edwin H. G., Becce, Fabio, and Omoumi, Patrick
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- *
SPECTRAL imaging , *COMPUTED tomography , *SPATIAL resolution , *BONE marrow , *DETECTORS - Abstract
In musculoskeletal imaging, CT is used in a wide range of indications, either alone or in a synergistic approach with MRI. While MRI is the preferred modality for the assessment of soft tissues and bone marrow, CT excels in the imaging of high-contrast structures, such as mineralized tissue. Additionally, the introduction of dual-energy CT in clinical practice two decades ago opened the door for spectral imaging applications. Recently, the advent of photon-counting detectors (PCDs) has further advanced the potential of CT, at least in theory. Compared to conventional energy-integrating detectors (EIDs), PCDs provide superior spatial resolution, reduced noise, and intrinsic spectral imaging capabilities. This review briefly describes the technical advantages of PCDs. For each technical feature, the corresponding applications in musculoskeletal imaging will be discussed, including high-spatial resolution imaging for the assessment of bone and crystal deposits, low-dose applications such as whole-body CT, as well as spectral imaging applications including the characterization of crystal deposits and imaging of metal hardware. Finally, we will highlight the potential of PCD-CT in emerging applications, underscoring the need for further preclinical and clinical validation to unleash its full clinical potential. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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- View/download PDF
3. Imaging approach to deposition and neurogenic arthropathies
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Cuervo Arevalo, Ricardo, Aluja-Jaramillo, Felipe, Corredor, Carlos, and Ramirez, Juan José
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- 2024
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- View/download PDF
4. Efficacy and safety of 10 mg versus 30 mg of oral prednisolone for acute CPP crystal arthritis: findings of a randomized controlled trial
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Leelasattakul, Wuttirak, Pongsittisak, Wanjak, Manavathongchai, Siriporn, and Satpanich, Panchalee
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- 2024
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- View/download PDF
5. Identifying Potential Classification Criteria for Calcium Pyrophosphate Deposition Disease: Item Generation and Item Reduction.
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Tedeschi, Sara, Pascart, Tristan, Latourte, Augustin, Godsave, Cattleya, Kundakci, Burak, Naden, Raymond, Taylor, William, Dalbeth, Nicola, Neogi, Tuhina, Perez-Ruiz, Fernando, Rosenthal, Ann, Becce, Fabio, Pascual, Eliseo, Andres, Mariano, Bardin, Thomas, Doherty, Michael, Ea, Hang-Korng, Filippou, Georgios, Guitierrez, Marwin, Iagnocco, Annamaria, Jansen, Tim, Kohler, Minna, Lioté, Frédéric, Matza, Mark, McCarthy, Geraldine, Ramonda, Roberta, Reginato, Anthony, Richette, Pascal, Singh, Jasvinder, Sivera, Francisca, So, Alexander, Stamp, Lisa, Yinh, Janeth, Yokose, Chio, Choi, Hyon, Abhishek, Abhishek, Terkeltaub, Robert, and FitzGerald, John
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Calcium Pyrophosphate ,Chondrocalcinosis ,Crystal Arthropathies ,Humans ,Knee Joint ,Wrist Joint - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Classification criteria for calcium pyrophosphate deposition (CPPD) disease will facilitate clinical research on this common crystalline arthritis. Our objective was to report on the first 2 phases of a 4-phase process for developing CPPD classification criteria. METHODS: CPPD classification criteria development is overseen by a 12-member steering committee. Item generation (phase I) included a scoping literature review of 5 literature databases and contributions from a 35-member combined expert committee and 2 patient research partners. Item reduction and refinement (phase II) involved a combined expert committee meeting, discussions among clinical, imaging, and laboratory advisory groups, and an item-rating exercise to assess the influence of individual items toward classification. The steering committee reviewed the modal rating score for each item (range -3 [strongly pushes away from CPPD] to +3 [strongly pushes toward CPPD]) to determine items to retain for future phases of criteria development. RESULTS: Item generation yielded 420 items (312 from the literature, 108 from experts/patients). The advisory groups eliminated items that they agreed were unlikely to distinguish between CPPD and other forms of arthritis, yielding 127 items for the item-rating exercise. Fifty-six items, most of which had a modal rating of +/- 2 or 3, were retained for future phases. As numerous imaging items were rated +3, the steering committee recommended focusing on imaging of the knee and wrist and 1 additional affected joint for calcification suggestive of CPP crystal deposition. CONCLUSION: A data- and expert-driven process is underway to develop CPPD classification criteria. Candidate items comprise clinical, imaging, and laboratory features.
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- 2022
6. Novel Complex Radiodiagnostics of Peripherial Arthropathies
- Author
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National Institute of Rheumatology and Physiotherapy, Hungary and Buda Hospital of the Hospitaller Order of Saint John of God
- Published
- 2022
7. The Hepatokine RBP4 Links Metabolic Diseases to Articular Inflammation.
- Author
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Pazos-Pérez, Andrés, Piñeiro-Ramil, María, Franco-Trepat, Eloi, Alonso-Pérez, Ana, Guillán-Fresco, María, Crespo-Golmar, Antía, López-Fagúndez, Miriam, Aranda, Javier Conde, Bravo, Susana Belen, Jorge-Mora, Alberto, and Gómez, Rodolfo
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METABOLIC disorders ,SYNOVIAL fluid ,NEUTROPHILS ,BIOSYNTHESIS ,INFLAMMATION ,LEUKOCYTE count - Abstract
Objectives: This study investigates the role of retinol binding protein 4 (RBP4) in an articular context. RBP4, a vitamin A transporter, is linked to various metabolic diseases. Methods: Synovial fluid RBP4 levels were assessed in crystalline arthritis (CA) patients using ELISA. RBP4's impact on articular cell types was analysed in vitro through RT-PCR and flow cytometry. Proteomic analysis was conducted on primary human osteoarthritis chondrocytes (hOACs). Results: Synovial fluid RBP4 concentrations in CA patients correlated positively with glucose levels and negatively with synovial leukocyte count and were elevated in hypertensive patients. In vitro, these RBP4 concentrations activated neutrophils, induced the expression of inflammatory factors in hOACs as well as synoviocytes, and triggered proteomic changes consistent with inflammation. Moreover, they increased catabolism and decreased anabolism, mitochondrial dysfunction, and glycolysis promotion. Both in silico and in vitro experiments suggested that RBP4 acts through TLR4. Conclusions: This study identifies relevant RBP4 concentrations in CA patients' synovial fluids, linking them to hypertensive patients with a metabolic disruption. Evidence is provided that RBP4 acts as a DAMP at these concentrations, inducing robust inflammatory, catabolic, chemotactic, and metabolic responses in chondrocytes, synoviocytes, and neutrophils. These effects may explain RBP4-related metabolic diseases' contribution to joint destruction in various rheumatic conditions like CA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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8. Calcium pyrophosphate deposition disease: historical overview and potential gaps
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Carlos Pineda, Hugo Sandoval, Iván Pérez-Neri, Carina Soto-Fajardo, and Fabián Carranza-Enríquez
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chondrocalcinosis ,Pseudogout ,calcium pyrophosphate ,crystal arthropathies ,CPPD ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
CPPD disease can affect patients’ quality of life through its various clinical presentations. This mini-review discusses the evolution of CPPD from its discovery to current knowledge of its pathogenesis, genetic associations, diagnostics, and treatment options. Despite extensive research, the exact mechanisms of CPPD are not well understood, and there is a notable lack of knowledge about psychosocial impacts and patient experiences. This study aims to present a CPPD Disease Timeline identifying gaps in current knowledge and potential directions for future research. These findings contribute to a broader understanding of CPPD disease and emphasize the importance of continued research and innovation in this field.
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- 2024
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9. Diagnostic Accuracy of Dual-energy CT (DAD)
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Henning Bliddal, MD, DMSci, Professor of Rheumatology
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- 2022
10. The role of dual-energy computed tomography in the diagnosis of gout and other crystalline arthropathies: A review
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Maria V. Onoyko, Elena A. Mershina, Olga A. Georginova, Maria L. Plotnikova, Alexandra V. Panyukova, and Valentin E. Sinitsyn
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calcium pyrophosphate ,crystal arthropathies ,diagnostic imaging ,dual-energy computed tomography ,gout ,Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
The importance of dual-energy computed tomography in the diagnosis of gout, the principles of dual-energy computed tomography, the accuracy of the methodology, and the types of artifacts are discussed in this study. The possible dependence of the presence of deposits of sodium monourate on other clinical data and the role of dual-energy computed tomography in the differential diagnosis of other crystalline arthropathies are considered. The dual-energy computed tomography has several advantages, including noninvasiveness, speed of execution, and a significant reduction in the risk of iatrogenic consequences compared with diagnostic arthrocentesis, which is the gold standard in diagnosing gout. Dual-energy computed tomography can accomplish gout detection, treatment, and differential diagnosis.
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- 2023
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11. Case Report and Literature Review of Parvimonas micra : Difficult-to-Treat Arthritis in Hiding.
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Cenicacelaya Olabarrieta, Xabier, Cabello Vallejo, Margarita, Morell-Hita, José Luis, and Macía-Villa, Cristina
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KNEE osteoarthritis ,CEFTRIAXONE ,INFECTIOUS arthritis ,GRAM-positive bacterial infections ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,CHONDROCALCINOSIS ,MICROBIAL sensitivity tests - Abstract
Septic arthritis is a life-threatening rheumatological syndrome that is highly related to a patient's immune status and comorbidities, and although the most common clinical presentation is rapid-onset monoarthritis, it can also appear as subacute or chronic joint swelling. In these cases, differential diagnosis is more challenging, but early diagnosis and treatment is no less urgent to ensure a good global prognosis and the best outcome of the affected joint. Anaerobic microorganisms, such as Parvimonas micra, are an uncommon cause of septic arthritis (less than 5% of cases) but may be the cause of subacute arthritis. Knowledge about Parvimonas micra is important, as it is difficult to culture in the laboratory and generates a synovial fluid with atypical characteristics for septic arthritis so that, if not suspected, its diagnosis can be easily overlooked and underdiagnosed. We present the case of a 76-year-old woman with subacute arthritis of the left knee, describe the difficult diagnosis and treatment of its unexpected cause (Parvimonas micra), and review previously described cases, identifying the possible common comorbidities that may help clinicians easily find and treat this cause of subacute septic arthritis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Gout, Hyperuricaemia and Crystal-Associated Disease Network (G-CAN) common language definition of gout.
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Murdoch, Rachel, Barry, Michael J, Choi, Hyon K, Hernandez, Daniel, Johnsen, Brianne, Labrador, Manuel, Reid, Susan, Singh, Jasvinder A, Terkeltaub, Robert, Vázquez Mellado, Janitzia, and Dalbeth, Nicola
- Subjects
crystal arthropathies ,epidemiology ,gout ,Clinical Sciences - Abstract
ObjectiveTo develop a Gout, Hyperuricaemia and Crystal-Associated Disease Network (G-CAN) common language definition of gout, with the goal of increasing public understanding and awareness, and ensure consistent and understandable messages about gout.MethodsA G-CAN working group that included patients, physicians and nongovernmental organisation (NGO) representatives was formed to develop a common language definition of gout for use with the public, media, healthcare providers and stakeholders. A literature search and interviews with patients, healthcare workers and stakeholders informed development of the definition. Following consultation with G-CAN members and partners, the definition was endorsed by the G-CAN board.ResultsThe G-CAN common language definition of gout describes the epidemiology, pathophysiology, symptoms and impact, risk factors, comorbidities, management and healthcare and workforce considerations. Detailed information is provided to support the content of the definition. After the publication of the English-language version, the definition will be available for translation into other languages by G-CAN members.ConclusionG-CAN has developed a concise and easily understandable statement describing gout in language that can be used in conversations with the lay public, media, NGOs, funders, healthcare providers and other stakeholders.
- Published
- 2021
13. Are non‐steroidal anti‐inflammatory drugs safe and effective in patients with acute gout? A Cochrane review summary with commentary.
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Coskun Benlidayi, Ilke
- Subjects
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ANTI-inflammatory agents , *GOUT , *PATIENT safety , *NONSTEROIDAL anti-inflammatory agents , *JOINT diseases , *INTERSTITIAL nephritis - Abstract
Are non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs safe and effective in patients with acute gout? Allopurinol is suggested as the first-line treatment agent.[10] The treatment of acute gout flares includes colchicine, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) or corticosteroids at first line, which can be used alone or in combination. A case-control study by Fu et al revealed that the severity of total pain is an important factor contributing to functional disability in patients with gout.[12] In this regard, the potential pain-relieving effect of tenoxicam after 24 hours is of utmost worth to patients suffering from pain. The authors concluded that the results derived from the Cochrane review[1] were in line with the available guidelines, which recommend the use of NSAIDs, COX-2, COXIBs, low-dose colchicine, or GCs for treatment of acute gout but do not rank any particular treatment option above others. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2023
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14. Palindromic Rheumatism
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Corradini, Davide, Mankia, Kulveer, Di Matteo, Andrea, Emmi, Lorenzo, Series Editor, Prisco, Domenico, Series Editor, Salvarani, Carlo, Editorial Board Member, Sinico, Renato Alberto, Editorial Board Member, Meroni, Pier Luigi, Editorial Board Member, Roccatello, Dario, Editorial Board Member, Matucci-Cerinic, Marco, Editorial Board Member, Gattorno, Marco, Editorial Board Member, de Benedetti, Fabrizio, Editorial Board Member, Cimaz, Rolando, Editorial Board Member, Plebani, Alessandro, Editorial Board Member, Baldari, Cosima Tatiana, Editorial Board Member, D'Elios, Mario Milco, Editorial Board Member, Vaglio, Augusto, Editorial Board Member, Ravindran, Vinod, editor, Santhanam, Sham, editor, and Goyal, Mohit, editor
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- 2022
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15. ESTUDIO DE LOS PACIENTES CON MONOARTRITIS AGUDA EN UN HOSPITAL DE TERCER NIVEL.
- Author
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DOUTHAT, AUGUSTO, RODRÍGUEZ RUIZ, ANDRÉS, MILANESIO, MARTÍN, NOVATTI, ELISA, FLORES BALVERDI, JANET, RISCANEVO, NADIA C., SAURIT, VERÓNICA, ÁLVAREZ, ANA C., PEÑARANDA, GABRIELA E., ALVARELLOS, ALEJANDRO, CAEIRO, FRANCISCO, BAENAS, DIEGO F., and SAAD, EMANUEL J.
- Abstract
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- Published
- 2023
16. The Hepatokine RBP4 Links Metabolic Diseases to Articular Inflammation
- Author
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Andrés Pazos-Pérez, María Piñeiro-Ramil, Eloi Franco-Trepat, Ana Alonso-Pérez, María Guillán-Fresco, Antía Crespo-Golmar, Miriam López-Fagúndez, Javier Conde Aranda, Susana Belen Bravo, Alberto Jorge-Mora, and Rodolfo Gómez
- Subjects
arthritis ,chondrocytes ,gout ,inflammation ,crystal arthropathies ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
Objectives: This study investigates the role of retinol binding protein 4 (RBP4) in an articular context. RBP4, a vitamin A transporter, is linked to various metabolic diseases. Methods: Synovial fluid RBP4 levels were assessed in crystalline arthritis (CA) patients using ELISA. RBP4’s impact on articular cell types was analysed in vitro through RT-PCR and flow cytometry. Proteomic analysis was conducted on primary human osteoarthritis chondrocytes (hOACs). Results: Synovial fluid RBP4 concentrations in CA patients correlated positively with glucose levels and negatively with synovial leukocyte count and were elevated in hypertensive patients. In vitro, these RBP4 concentrations activated neutrophils, induced the expression of inflammatory factors in hOACs as well as synoviocytes, and triggered proteomic changes consistent with inflammation. Moreover, they increased catabolism and decreased anabolism, mitochondrial dysfunction, and glycolysis promotion. Both in silico and in vitro experiments suggested that RBP4 acts through TLR4. Conclusions: This study identifies relevant RBP4 concentrations in CA patients’ synovial fluids, linking them to hypertensive patients with a metabolic disruption. Evidence is provided that RBP4 acts as a DAMP at these concentrations, inducing robust inflammatory, catabolic, chemotactic, and metabolic responses in chondrocytes, synoviocytes, and neutrophils. These effects may explain RBP4-related metabolic diseases’ contribution to joint destruction in various rheumatic conditions like CA.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Is It Time to Bring Back Knee Washout?
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Ike, Robert W. and Kalunian, Kenneth C.
- Subjects
INFECTIOUS arthritis ,ARTHROSCOPY ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,KNEE joint ,OSTEOARTHRITIS ,ARTHRITIS Impact Measurement Scales - Abstract
Washout of knee joint contents, whether by arthrotomy, arthroscopy, or percutaneous methods, can remove phlogistic material contributing to the problem at hand. Observations dating from the turn of the last century coupled with multiple trials suggest such that an intervention can be useful in the management of osteoarthritis, inflammatory arthropathies, crystal arthritis, and septic arthritis. We suggest that this intervention-applicable at the bedside with minimal cost, preparation, or expertise-be reconsidered as an adjunct in management of these disorders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
- Full Text
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18. Case Report and Literature Review of Parvimonas micra: Difficult-to-Treat Arthritis in Hiding
- Author
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Xabier Cenicacelaya Olabarrieta, Margarita Cabello Vallejo, José Luis Morell-Hita, and Cristina Macía-Villa
- Subjects
septic arthritis ,arthritis ,crystal arthropathies ,chondrocalcinosis ,neoplasms ,Medicine - Abstract
Septic arthritis is a life-threatening rheumatological syndrome that is highly related to a patient’s immune status and comorbidities, and although the most common clinical presentation is rapid-onset monoarthritis, it can also appear as subacute or chronic joint swelling. In these cases, differential diagnosis is more challenging, but early diagnosis and treatment is no less urgent to ensure a good global prognosis and the best outcome of the affected joint. Anaerobic microorganisms, such as Parvimonas micra, are an uncommon cause of septic arthritis (less than 5% of cases) but may be the cause of subacute arthritis. Knowledge about Parvimonas micra is important, as it is difficult to culture in the laboratory and generates a synovial fluid with atypical characteristics for septic arthritis so that, if not suspected, its diagnosis can be easily overlooked and underdiagnosed. We present the case of a 76-year-old woman with subacute arthritis of the left knee, describe the difficult diagnosis and treatment of its unexpected cause (Parvimonas micra), and review previously described cases, identifying the possible common comorbidities that may help clinicians easily find and treat this cause of subacute septic arthritis.
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Association between female reproductive factors and gout: a nationwide population-based cohort study of 1 million postmenopausal women
- Author
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Yeonghee Eun, In-Young Kim, Kyungdo Han, Kyu Na Lee, Dong-Yun Lee, Dong Wook Shin, Seonyoung Kang, Seulkee Lee, Hoon-Suk Cha, Eun-Mi Koh, Jaejoon Lee, and Hyungjin Kim
- Subjects
Crystal arthropathies ,Reproductive ,Epidemiology ,Hormones ,Pregnancy and rheumatic disease ,Diseases of the musculoskeletal system ,RC925-935 - Abstract
Abstract Background Previous studies have shown that the incidence and risk factors of gout differs according to sex. However, little research has been done on the association between reproductive factors and gout. We conducted an analysis of a large nationwide population-based cohort of postmenopausal women to determine whether there is an association between reproductive factors and the incidence of gout. Methods A total of 1,076,378 postmenopausal women aged 40–69 years who participated in national health screenings in 2009 were included in the study. The outcome was the occurrence of incident gout, which was defined using the ICD-10 code of gout (M10) in the claim database. Cox proportional hazard models were used for the analyses and stratified analyses according to body mass index (BMI) and the presence/absence of chronic kidney disease (CKD) were performed. Results The mean follow-up duration was 8.1 years, and incident cases of gout were 64,052 (incidence rate 7.31 per 1000 person-years). Later menarche, earlier menopause, and a shorter reproductive span were associated with a high risk of gout. No association between parity and gout incidence was observed. Use of oral contraceptives (OC) and hormone replacement therapy (HRT) were associated with an increased risk of gout. The association between reproductive factors and gout was not statistical significant in the high BMI group. The effects of OC and HRT usage on gout were not significant in the CKD group. Conclusion Shorter exposure to endogenous estrogen was associated with a high risk of gout. Conversely, exposure to exogenous estrogen such as OC and HRT was associated with an increased risk of gout.
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- 2021
- Full Text
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20. 2023 EULAR recommendations on imaging in diagnosis and management of crystal-induced arthropathies in clinical practice
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Mandl, Peter, D'Agostino, Maria Antonietta, Navarro-Compán, Victoria, Geßl, Irina, Sakellariou, Garifallia, Banerjee, Abhishek, Becce, Fabio, Dalbeth, Nicola, Ea, Hang-Korng, Filippucci, Emilio, Hammer, Hilde Berner, Iagnocco, Annamaria, de Thurah, Annette, Naredo, Esperanza, Ottaviani, Sebastien, Pascart, Tristan, Pérez-Ruiz, Fernando, Pitsillidou, Irene A, Proft, Fabian, Rech, Juergen, Schmidt, Wolfgang A, Sconfienza, Luca Maria, Terslev, Lene, Wildner, Brigitte, Zufferey, Pascal, Filippou, Georgios, D'Agostino, Maria Antonietta (ORCID:0000-0002-5347-0060), Abhishek, Abhishek, Mandl, Peter, D'Agostino, Maria Antonietta, Navarro-Compán, Victoria, Geßl, Irina, Sakellariou, Garifallia, Banerjee, Abhishek, Becce, Fabio, Dalbeth, Nicola, Ea, Hang-Korng, Filippucci, Emilio, Hammer, Hilde Berner, Iagnocco, Annamaria, de Thurah, Annette, Naredo, Esperanza, Ottaviani, Sebastien, Pascart, Tristan, Pérez-Ruiz, Fernando, Pitsillidou, Irene A, Proft, Fabian, Rech, Juergen, Schmidt, Wolfgang A, Sconfienza, Luca Maria, Terslev, Lene, Wildner, Brigitte, Zufferey, Pascal, Filippou, Georgios, D'Agostino, Maria Antonietta (ORCID:0000-0002-5347-0060), and Abhishek, Abhishek
- Abstract
Objective: To formulate evidence-based recommendations and overarching principles on the use of imaging in the clinical management of crystal-induced arthropathies (CiAs). Methods: An international task force of 25 rheumatologists, radiologists, methodologists, healthcare professionals and patient research partners from 11 countries was formed according to the EULAR standard operating procedures. Fourteen key questions on the role of imaging in the most common forms of CiA were generated. The CiA assessed included gout, calcium pyrophosphate deposition disease and basic calcium phosphate deposition disease. Imaging modalities included conventional radiography, ultrasound, CT and MRI. Experts applied research evidence obtained from four systematic literature reviews using MEDLINE, EMBASE and CENTRAL. Task force members provided level of agreement (LoA) anonymously by using a Numerical Rating Scale from 0 to 10. Results: Five overarching principles and 10 recommendations were developed encompassing the role of imaging in various aspects of patient management: making a diagnosis of CiA, monitoring inflammation and damage, predicting outcome, response to treatment, guided interventions and patient education. Overall, the LoA for the recommendations was high (8.46-9.92). Conclusions: These are the first recommendations that encompass the major forms of CiA and guide the use of common imaging modalities in this disease group in clinical practice.
- Published
- 2024
21. Gout risk in adults with pre-diabetes initiating metformin.
- Author
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Marrugo J, Santacroce LM, Paudel ML, Fukui S, Turchin A, Tedeschi SK, and Solomon DH
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Incidence, Adult, Uric Acid blood, Propensity Score, Aged, C-Reactive Protein analysis, Proportional Hazards Models, Cohort Studies, Glycated Hemoglobin analysis, Risk Factors, Metformin therapeutic use, Metformin administration & dosage, Gout epidemiology, Gout drug therapy, Gout blood, Prediabetic State epidemiology, Hypoglycemic Agents therapeutic use, Hypoglycemic Agents administration & dosage
- Abstract
Objective: Despite the strong association between gout and pre-diabetes, the role of metformin in gout among individuals with pre-diabetes remains uncertain. We compared the incidence rates of gout in adults with pre-diabetes starting metformin with those not using antidiabetic treatments., Methods: We conducted a new-user, propensity score-matched cohort study using electronic health records from an academic health system (2007-2022). Pre-diabetes was defined based on haemoglobin A1c levels. Metformin users were identified and followed from the first metformin prescription date. Non-users of antidiabetic medications were matched to metformin users based on propensity score and the start of follow-up. The primary outcome was incident gout. Cox proportional hazards models estimated the HR for metformin. Linear regression analyses assessed the association between metformin use and changes in serum urate (SU) or C-reactive protein (CRP)., Results: We identified 25 064 individuals with pre-diabetes and propensity score-matched 1154 metformin initiators to 13 877 non-users. Baseline characteristics were well balanced (all standardised mean differences <0.1). The median follow-up was 3.9 years. The incidence rate of gout per 1000 person-years was lower in metformin users 7.1 (95% CI 5.1 to 10) compared with non-users 9.5 (95% CI 8.8 to 10.2). Metformin initiation was associated with a reduced relative risk of gout (HR 0.68, 95% CI 0.48 to 0.96). No relationship was found between metformin and changes in SU or CRP., Conclusions: Metformin use was associated with a reduced risk of gout among adults with pre-diabetes, suggesting that metformin may be important in lowering gout risk in individuals with pre-diabetes., Competing Interests: Competing interests: Disclosure of interests: DHS receives salary support from unrelated research contracts to Brigham and Women’s Hospital from CorEvitas, Janssen and Novartis. AT receives salary support from unrelated research contracts to Brigham and Women’s Hospital from Eli Lilly. AT serves as a consultant in areas unrelated to this research to Novo Nordisk and Proteomics International. SKT reports consulting fees from Novartis. JM: None declared. SF: None declared. MLP: None declared. LMS: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ on behalf of EULAR.)
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- 2024
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22. CPPD disease presenting with acute arthritis of the first metatarsophalangeal joint.
- Author
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Ferrito M, Sirotti S, Sarzi Puttini P, Caporali R, and Filippou G
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- Humans, Arthritis diagnostic imaging, Arthritis etiology, Female, Middle Aged, Acute Disease, Male, Metatarsophalangeal Joint diagnostic imaging, Metatarsophalangeal Joint pathology, Chondrocalcinosis diagnostic imaging, Chondrocalcinosis complications, Chondrocalcinosis diagnosis
- Abstract
Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Identifying the association between serum urate levels and gout flares in patients taking urate-lowering therapy: a post hoc cohort analysis of the CARES trial with consideration of dropout.
- Author
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Tedeschi SK, Hayashi K, Zhang Y, Choi H, and Solomon DH
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- Humans, Male, Female, Aged, Middle Aged, Patient Dropouts statistics & numerical data, Cohort Studies, Gout blood, Gout drug therapy, Gout Suppressants therapeutic use, Uric Acid blood, Allopurinol therapeutic use, Febuxostat therapeutic use, Symptom Flare Up
- Abstract
Objective: To investigate gout flare rates based on repeated serum urate (SU) measurements in a randomised controlled trial of urate-lowering therapy (ULT), accounting for dropout and death., Methods: We performed a secondary analysis using data from Cardiovascular Safety of Febuxostat or Allopurinol in Patients with Gout, which randomised participants to febuxostat or allopurinol, titrated to target SU <6 mg/dL with flare prophylaxis for 6 months. SU was categorised as ≤3.9, 4.0-5.9, 6.0-7.9, 8.0-9.9 or ≥ 10 mg/dL at each 3-6 month follow-up. The primary outcome was gout flare. Poisson regression models, adjusted for covariates and factors related to participant retention versus dropout, estimated gout flare incidence rate ratios by time-varying SU category., Results: Among 6183 participants, the median age was 65 years and 84% were male. Peak gout flare rates for all SU categories were observed in months 0-6, coinciding with the initiation of ULT and months 6-12 after stopping prophylaxis. Flare rates were similar across SU groups in the initial year of ULT. During months 36-72, a dose-response relationship was observed between the SU category and flare rate. Lower flare rates were observed when SU ≤3.9 mg/dL and greater rates when SU ≥10 mg/dL, compared with SU 4.0-5.9 mg/dL (p for trend <0.01)., Conclusion: Gout flare rates were persistently higher when SU ≥6 mg/dL after the first year of ULT after accounting for censoring. The spike in flares in all categories after stopping prophylaxis suggests a longer duration of prophylaxis may be warranted., Competing Interests: Competing interests: SKT: consulting fees for Novartis and Avalo Therapeutics. HC: research grants from Horizon; service on a board or committee for LG Chem, Shanton and ANI Pharmaceuticals. DHS: research grants from CorEvitas, Janssen, Moderna and Novartis. Royalties from UpToDate. KH and YZ: no competing interests reported., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ on behalf of EULAR.)
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- 2024
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24. Perioperative Care of the Orthopedic Patient with Gout
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Cheah, Jonathan T. L., Fields, Theodore R., MacKenzie, C. Ronald, editor, Cornell, Charles N., editor, and Memtsoudis, Stavros G., editor
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- 2020
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25. Gicht.
- Author
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Tausche, Anne-Kathrin
- Abstract
Copyright of Zeitschrift für Rheumatologie is the property of Springer Nature and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2022
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26. Psoriatic arthritis with hyperuricemia: more peripheral, destructive, and challenging to treat.
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Widawski, L., Fabacher, T., Spielmann, L., Gottenberg, JE., Sibilia, J., Duret, PM., Messer, L., and Felten, R.
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- *
PSORIATIC arthritis , *HYPERURICEMIA , *BODY mass index , *INDIVIDUALIZED medicine , *SYMPTOMS - Abstract
Objective: To study the impact of hyperuricemia on clinical presentation, severity, and associated comorbidities of psoriatic arthritis (PsA). Methods: Retrospective bicentric case–control study performed in Strasbourg and Colmar, France, from 2009 to 2019. Patients with PsA (according to ICD-10 coding) and at least one available serum urate (SU) measurement were included. Demographic, comorbidities, clinical, and radiographic data were collected. Hyperuricemia was defined as SU level ≥ 360 µmol/L. Results: We included 242 patients: 73 (30.2%) had hyperuricemia and 15 (6.2%) met 2015 ACR/EULAR criteria for gout. On univariate analysis, as compared with normo-uricemic patients, hyperuricemic patients were more frequently male (72.6% vs 39.1%, p = 1.6 × 10−6) with higher body mass index (30.9 vs 28.7 kg/m2, p = 0.015) and more comorbidities (Charlson comorbidity index: 2.6 vs 1.8, p = 0.005). PsA started at an older age (47.5 vs 43 years, p = 0.016) was more polyarticular (56.2% vs 41.9%, p = 0.049) than axial (9.6% vs 22.8%, p = 0.019) and more destructive (52.8% vs 37.4%, p = 0.032). PsA patients with joint destruction more frequently had hyperuricemia than did others (37.6% vs 25.8%, p = 0.047). Multivariable analysis confirmed the association of hyperuricemic PsA with peripheral joint involvement (odds ratio 2.98; 95% confidence interval 1.15–7.75; p = 0.025) and less good response to treatment (0.35; 0.15–0.87; p = 0.024). Conclusion: Patients with hyperuricemic PsA show poorer response to PsA treatment and have more peripheral and destructive joint damage than normo-uricemic patients. Key Points • Gout and psoriatic arthritis (PsA) can co-exist in the same patient. • Monosodium urate crystals might have a deleterious impact on PsA. • Hyperuricemic PsA is more polyarticular, less frequently axial, and more destructive than normo-uricemic PsA. • PsA with hyperuricemia should lead to more personalized medicine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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27. Clinical characteristics of juvenile gout and treatment response to febuxostat.
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Shaoling Zheng, Lee, Pui Y., Yukai Huang, Weiming Deng, Zhixiang Huang, Qidang Huang, Shuyang Chen, Tianwang Li, Zheng, Shaoling, Huang, Yukai, Deng, Weiming, Huang, Zhixiang, Huang, Qidang, Chen, Shuyang, and Li, Tianwang
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- 2022
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28. Impact of adiposity on risk of female gout among those genetically predisposed: sex-specific prospective cohort study findings over >32 years.
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McCormick, Natalie, Chio Yokose, Na Lu, Joshi, Amit D., Curhan, Gary C., Choi, Hyon K., Yokose, Chio, and Lu, Na
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OBESITY complications ,OBESITY ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH methodology ,GENETIC polymorphisms ,EVALUATION research ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DISEASE susceptibility ,IMPACT of Event Scale ,RESEARCH funding ,BODY mass index ,GOUT ,LONGITUDINAL method ,ADIPOSE tissues ,DISEASE complications - Abstract
Objectives: To evaluate the joint (combined) association of excess adiposity and genetic predisposition with the risk of incident female gout, and compare to their male counterparts; and determine the proportion attributable to body mass index (BMI) only, genetic risk score (GRS) only, and to their interaction.Methods: We prospectively investigated potential gene-BMI interactions in 18 244 women from the Nurses' Health Study and compared with 10 888 men from the Health Professionals Follow-Up Study. GRS for hyperuricaemia was derived from 114 common urate-associated single nucleotide polymorphisms.Results: Multivariable relative risk (RR) for female gout was 1.49 (95% CI 1.42 to 1.56) per 5 kg/m2 increment of BMI and 1.43 (1.35 to 1.52) per SD increment in the GRS. For their joint association of BMI and GRS, RR was 2.18 (2.03 to 2.36), more than the sum of each individual factor, indicating significant interaction on an additive scale (p for interaction <0.001). The attributable proportions of joint effect for female gout were 42% (37% to 46%) to adiposity, 37% (32% to 42%) to genetic predisposition and 22% (16% to 28%) to their interaction. Additive interaction among men was smaller although still significant (p interaction 0.002, p for heterogeneity 0.04 between women and men), and attributable proportion of joint effect was 14% (6% to 22%).Conclusions: While excess adiposity 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. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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29. Acute haematogenous periprosthetic joint infection due to
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Joost B, Malkus, Louren M, Goedhart, and Wiebe C, Verra
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Male ,Arthritis, Infectious ,Prosthesis-Related Infections ,Crystal Arthropathies ,Debridement ,Gout ,Knee Joint ,Humans ,Streptococcus sanguis ,Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee ,Symptom Flare Up ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
A man in his 60s, with a medical history of gout, underwent total knee arthroplasty of his right knee followed by expeditious rehabilitation. Seven months after surgery, he was referred to the emergency ward with sudden onset of pain and swelling of his right knee accompanied with fever. Further inquiry revealed no trauma, infection or skin lesions besides a tongue bite several weeks earlier. An impaired range motion of the knee was seen on physical examination along with a tachycardia. Laboratory studies showed a C reactive protein of 345 mg/L, after which a debridement, antibiotics and implant retention procedure was performed. Intraoperatively obtained synovial fluid showed monosodium urate crystals consistent with crystalline arthropathy (ie, gout). However, unexpectedly
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- 2024
30. Disease modification in gout: a qualitative study of gout expert rheumatologists.
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Singh, Jasvinder A
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RHEUMATOLOGISTS ,CARDIOVASCULAR diseases - Abstract
Objective The aim was to examine the views of health-care providers regarding disease modification in gout, with the potential to derive a provisional set of domains for disease modification in gout. Methods A qualitative nominal group study was performed with 20 gout experts (15 expert/expert panel members of the 2012 and/or 2020 ACR gout guidelines and/or 2015 ACR/EULAR gout classification criteria) about what constitutes disease modification in gout: 'What sorts of things do you think constitute a change in the course of disease in gout? (positive); what are all the ways in which gout as a disease can be modified?' Results Decrease in gout flares was rated number one rank in all six nominal groups as indicative of disease modification in gout, followed by serum urate lowering, which was rated number one rank in one of the six nominal groups (tied score with flares in one nominal group). Other components of gout disease modification were to improve quality of life/productivity; restore function; reduce/eliminate pain; reduce tophi burden; and joint preservation or resolution of joint damage. Potential additional components that were not ranked in the top three votes within each nominal group were: decreasing health-care cost/utilization; reducing cardiovascular/renal morbidity/mortality; and stopping formation of urate crystals. Conclusion This qualitative study provides a provisional set of domains for disease modification in gout. Future studies for the development of thresholds for disease modification domains and wider consensus on this definition are needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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31. Relationship between serum urate and changes in dual-energy CT monosodium urate crystal volume over 1 year in people with gout: an individual participant data analysis.
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Kelly B, Gamble GD, Horne A, Doyle AJ, Drake J, Aati O, Son CN, Kalluru R, Latto K, Stamp L, and Dalbeth N
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Objectives: The dynamics of monosodium urate (MSU) crystal changes across a range of serum urate concentrations in people with gout are unknown. This study aimed to systematically examine the relationship between serum urate and changes in dual-energy CT (DECT) urate volume in people with gout and stable serum urate concentrations., Methods: Individual participant data were analysed from three studies of people with gout. The time periods for the analysis were selected to identify study participants with serial DECT scans of both feet over a 12-month epoch of stable urate-lowering therapy and serum urate concentrations. Data from 251 study participants were analysed using a mixed models analysis of covariance approach according to mean serum urate cut-points and mean serum urate bands., Results: For all mean serum urate cut-points assessed (0.24, 0.30, 0.36, 0.42 and 0.48 mmol/L), reductions in DECT urate volumes were observed below the cut-point. Increased DECT urate volumes were observed at or above the 0.48 mmol/L mean serum urate cut-point. Differences in the change in DECT volume were observed for the 0.42 mmol/L cut-point (p=0.0044) and the 0.48 mmol/L cut-point (p<0.0001). Significantly reduced DECT urate volumes were observed for the mean serum urate bands<0.24 mmol/L and 0.24-0.29 mmol/L and increased DECT urate volume was observed for the mean serum urate band≥0.48 mmol/L., Conclusions: Over 1 year, MSU crystal dissolution, as measured by DECT, occurs with mean serum urate bands of<0.24 mmol/L and 0.24-0.29 mmol/L while MSU crystal formation occurs with mean serum urate≥0.48 mmol/L., Competing Interests: Competing interests: ND has received consulting fees, speaker fees or grants from AstraZeneca, Novartis, Horizon, Selecta, Arthrosi, JW Pharmaceutical Corporation, PK Med, LG Chem, JPI, PTC Therapeutics, Protalix, Unlocked Labs, Hikma, Dexcel Pharma, Shanton Pharma, Sobi, Avalo outside the submitted work. The other authors have no disclosures., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ on behalf of EULAR.)
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- 2024
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32. 'Gout was like the boss'. A qualitative study exploring the impact of gout on employment.
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Diaz-Torne C, Pou MA, Horne A, Gasteiger C, and Dalbeth N
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- Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Female, Adult, New Zealand epidemiology, Spain epidemiology, Aged, Quality of Life, Interviews as Topic, Workplace psychology, Gout psychology, Gout epidemiology, Qualitative Research, Employment
- Abstract
Objective: Previous research has identified that gout impacts various domains of daily life. However, there have been no qualitative studies focusing on employment. This study aimed to understand the impact of gout on employment., Methods: Semistructured interviews were conducted in Spain and Aotearoa/New Zealand, in people with gout (according to the 2015 American College of Rheumatology/European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology criteria) who had experienced a gout flare during their employment. The interviews were guided by questions exploring the impact on employment, job changes, disclosure and co-workers' reactions. Data were analysed thematically., Results: Eighteen participants were interviewed (89% male, mean age 52.9 years). Six themes were identified. The characteristics of the disease (pain intensity, tophi and joints affected) and the job itself (including physical job requirement and workplace flexibility) determined the experience of working with gout. The experiences were divided into physical (from total incapacity to working despite pain), emotional (feeling responsible, embarrassment, guilt and depression) and social (including disclosure responses and financial impact). Gout management strategies including rapid gout flare management and urate-lowering therapy reduced the number of flares and the intensity of pain, and allowed work attendance and participation., Conclusion: Both gout and work characteristics influence the employment experience for people with gout. Effective management of gout led to improved work experiences in all its domains., Competing Interests: Competing interests: CD-T has received speaker fees from AsacPharma. ND has received consulting fees, speaker fees or grants from AstraZeneca, Novartis, Horizon, Selecta, Arthrosi, JW Pharmaceutical Corporation, PK Med, LG Chem, JPI, PTC Therapeutics, Protalix, Unlocked Labs, Hikma, Dexcel Pharma outside the submitted work. MAP, AH and CG have nothing to disclosure., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2024
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33. Changes in alcohol intake and serum urate changes: longitudinal analyses of annual medical examination database.
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Fukui S, Okada M, Shinozaki T, Asano T, Nakai T, Tamaki H, Kishimoto M, Hasegawa H, Matsuda T, Marrugo J, Tedeschi SK, Choi H, and Solomon DH
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- Humans, Female, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Longitudinal Studies, Adult, Japan epidemiology, Aged, Databases, Factual, Beer, Uric Acid blood, Alcohol Drinking blood, Alcohol Drinking epidemiology, Hyperuricemia blood, Hyperuricemia epidemiology, Gout blood, Gout epidemiology
- Abstract
Introduction: Despite the established cross-sectional association between alcohol intake and serum urate (SU), its longitudinal association remains unknown. This study aimed to determine whether changes in alcohol intake have a clinically relevant association with SU change., Method: We conducted retrospective analyses using systematically collected annual medical examination data from October 2012 to October 2022 in a Japanese preventive medicine centre. The exposure was changes in alcohol intake between two consecutive visits. The association of SU changes with alcohol intake changes was estimated by mixed-effect linear regression with adjustment for relevant covariates., Results: We analysed 63 486 participants (median age, 47.0 years; 55% women; 58.6% regular alcohol drinkers with a median of 1.4 drinks/day) with 370 572 visits. The median SU level was 5.3 mg/dL, and 506 (0.8%) participants had diagnoses of gout or hyperuricemia without medication use during the study period. Decreasing one daily alcohol intake had a clinically small association with SU changes (-0.019 (95% CI: -0.021 to -0.017) mg/dL). Beer had the largest association with SU (-0.036 (95% CI: -0.039 to -0.032) mg/dL for one beer decrease). Complete discontinuation of any alcohol from a mean of 0.8 drinks/day was associated with -0.056 mg/dL (95% CI: -0.068 to -0.043) decrease in SU; the association became larger in hyperuricemic participants (-0.110 mg/dL (95% CI: -0.154 to -0.066) for alcohol discontinuation from a mean of 1.0 drinks/day)., Conclusions: This study revealed changes in alcohol intake had small associations with SU change at the general Japanese population level. Complete discontinuation of alcohol in hyperuricemic participants had only modest improvement in SU., Competing Interests: Competing interests: HT reports personal fees from Chugai Pharmaceutical, AbbVie, Ono Pharmaceutical, Kyowa-Kirin, Takeda Pharmaceutical, Astellas Pharma, Tanabe-Mitsubishi, GSK, Pfizer, Dai-ichi-Sankyo, Eisai, Illy-lily and Ayumi, outside the submitted work. MK reports consulting fees and honoraria from AbbVie, Amgen, Asahi-Kasei Pharma, Astellas, Ayumi Pharma, BMS, Celgene, Chugai, Daiichi-Sankyo, Eisai, Eli Lilly, Gilead, Janssen, Kyowa Kirin, Novartis, Ono Pharma, Pfizer, Tanabe-Mitsubishi, Teijin Pharma, and UCB Pharma, outside the submitted work. SKT reports consulting fees from Novartis.DS reports research grants from CorEvitas, Janssen, Moderna, and Novartis, and royalties from UpToDate. All other authors have no conflict of interest., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ on behalf of EULAR.)
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- 2024
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34. Systemic inflammatory cytokine profiles in patients with gout during flare, intercritical and treat-to-target phases: TNFSF14 as new biomarker.
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Ea HK, Kischkel B, Chirayath TW, Klück V, Aparicio C, Loeung HU, Manivet P, Jansen T, Zarka M, Lioté F, Latourte A, Bardin T, Gauffenic A, Vicaut E, Crișan TO, Netea MG, Richette P, and Joosten LA
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- Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Female, Symptom Flare Up, Cytokines blood, Gout Suppressants therapeutic use, Aged, Uric Acid blood, Prospective Studies, Interleukin-6 blood, Adult, Proteomics methods, Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor A blood, Gout drug therapy, Gout blood, Biomarkers blood, Tumor Necrosis Factor Ligand Superfamily Member 14 blood
- Abstract
Introduction: Untreated gout is characterised by monosodium urate (MSU) crystal accumulation responsible for recurrent flares that are commonly separated by asymptomatic phases. Both phases are inflammatory conditions of variable intensity. Gout flares are self-limited inflammatory reactions involving multiple mediators. This study aimed to characterise the inflammatory profiles of gout at different phases., Methods: Using the Olink targeted proteomics, levels of 92 inflammation-related proteins were measured in plasma samples of a prospective gout population (GOUTROS), collected at gout flare (T1), the intercritical phase (T2) and after reaching the target serum urate level under urate-lowering therapy (T3). Results were validated in an independent cohort (OLT1177-05) with plasmas collected at T1 and T2. Ex vivo and in vitro experiments were performed to assess the inflammatory properties of new biomarkers., Results: In total, 21 inflammatory new biomarkers were differentially expressed during the three time-points of gout disease. The levels of four of these proteins (interleukin 6 (IL-6), colony-stimulating factor 1, vascular endothelial growth factor A and tumour necrosis factor superfamily 14 (TNFSF14)) were increased during gout flare in an independent cohort. IL-6 and TNFSF14 had the highest fold change in expression during T1 versus T2 or T3. TNFSF14 was produced at the inflamed joint and enhanced the inflammatory response induced by lipopolysaccharide and MSU crystal stimulation. Conversely, TNFSF14 blockade reduced the inflammatory response. Additionally, single nucleotide polymorphisms of TNFSF14 affected the ability of myeloid cells to produce inflammatory cytokines., Conclusion: Gout flare involves multiple inflammatory mediators that may be used as potential therapeutic targets., Competing Interests: Competing interests: LJ is member of the scientific advisory board of Olatec Therapeutics. All other authors declare no competing financial interests in relation to the work described., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ on behalf of EULAR.)
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- 2024
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35. Variants in urate transporters, ADH1B, GCKR and MEPE genes associate with transition from asymptomatic hyperuricaemia to gout: results of the first gout versus asymptomatic hyperuricaemia GWAS in Caucasians using data from the UK Biobank.
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Plata, Gabriela Sandoval, Morgan, Kevin, Abhishek, Abhishek, and Sandoval-Plata, Gabriela
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HYPERURICEMIA ,PROTEINS ,DISEASE progression ,RESEARCH ,SEQUENCE analysis ,GENETICS ,ALCOHOL dehydrogenase ,RESEARCH methodology ,PROTEOLYTIC enzymes ,GENETIC polymorphisms ,MEDICAL cooperation ,EVALUATION research ,COMPARATIVE studies ,SYMPTOMS ,GLYCOPROTEINS ,PHOSPHOPROTEINS ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,GOUT ,CARRIER proteins - Abstract
Objectives: To perform a genome-wide association study (GWAS) of gout cases versus asymptomatic hyperuricaemia (AH) controls, and gout cases versus normouricaemia controls, and to generate a polygenic risk score (PRS) to determine gout-case versus AH-control status.Methods: Gout cases and AH controls (serum urate (SU) ≥6.0 mg/dL) from the UK Biobank were divided into discovery (4934 cases, 56 948 controls) and replication (2115 cases, 24 406 controls) cohorts. GWAS was conducted and PRS generated using summary statistics in discovery cohort as the base dataset and the replication cohort as the target dataset. The predictive ability of the model was evaluated. GWAS were performed to identify variants associated with gout compared with normouricaemic controls using SU <6.0 mg/dL and <7.0 mg/dL thresholds, respectively.Results: Thirteen independent single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in ABCG2, SLC2A9, SLC22A11, GCKR, MEPE, PPM1K-DT, LOC105377323 and ADH1B reached genome-wide significance and replicated as predictors of AH to gout transition. Twelve of 13 associations were novel for this transition, and rs1229984 (ADH1B) was identified as GWAS locus for gout for the first time. The best PRS model was generated from association data of 17 SNPs; and had predictive ability of 58.5% that increased to 69.2% on including demographic factors. Two novel SNPs rs760077(MTX1) and rs3800307(PRSS16) achieved GWAS significance for association with gout compared with normouricaemic controls using both SU thresholds.Conclusion: The association of urate transporters with gout supports the central role of hyperuricaemia in its pathogenesis. Larger GWAS are required to identify if variants in inflammatory pathways contribute to progression from AH to gout. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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36. Synovial fluid analysis for the enhanced clinical diagnosis of crystal arthropathies in a tertiary care institution.
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Zamudio-Cuevas, Yessica, Martínez-Nava, Gabriela Angélica, Martínez-Flores, Karina, Ventura-Ríos, Lucio, Vazquez-Mellado, Janitzia, Rodríguez-Henríquez, Pedro, Pineda, Carlos, Franco-Cendejas, Rafael, Lozada-Pérez, Carlos Alberto, and Fernández-Torres, Javier
- Subjects
- *
SYNOVIAL fluid , *OSTEOARTHRITIS , *DIAGNOSIS , *TERTIARY care , *CRYSTALS , *RHEUMATOID arthritis - Abstract
Introduction/objectives: Few studies have addressed the detection and clinical impact of different crystals in patients with diverse rheumatologic diagnoses in Latin America. The aim of this study was to assess the consistency between the clinical referring diagnosis and the identification of crystals, such as monosodium urate (MSU) and calcium pyrophosphate (CPP), in the synovial fluid (SF) of patients from a Mexican tertiary care institution. Methods: We reviewed the results of 264 SF analyses to identify any changes in diagnosis upon SF analysis. We reported patient medical file data on sex, age, diagnosis, and microscopic SF analysis results. We performed consistency analyses between referring diagnoses and SF findings with McNemar's test. Results: The prevalence of MSU crystals in SF was noted in 89.1% of gout cases and 9.09% of cases of calcium pyrophosphate disease (CPPD). CPP crystals were present in 54.5% of CPPD cases, 42.9% of osteoarthritis (OA) cases, and 7.27% of gout cases. Calcium hydroxyapatite (HA) crystals were identified in 5.45% of gout cases, 33.3% of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) cases, 57.1% of OA cases, and 63.6% of CPPD cases. Cholesterol and lipid crystals were present in small proportions in RA cases. Glucocorticoid crystals were observed in 1.85% of gout cases, 44.4% of RA cases, and 42.9% of OA cases. We observed an association of MSU identification with clinical suspicion of gout (P = 0.08), CPP with OA (P = 0.26) and CPPD (P = 0.50). An association was noted between HA and the diagnosis of CPPD (P = 0.84) and OA (P > 0.99). The number of initial diagnoses that changed upon SF analysis was 14.3%. Conclusions: SF analysis has major diagnostic value regarding MSU crystals and gout. Our findings underscore the importance of SF crystal analysis in identifying the prevalence of crystals in the Mexican population. SF analysis provides for better diagnosis of crystal arthropathies and improves the quality of the medical care that the patient receives. Key Points • Synovial fluid analysis in laboratories from developing countries has been scarce. • In some cases, the initial diagnosis is modified after of synovial fluid analysis. • This study confirmed that synovial fluid analysis exhibits major diagnostic value for urate crystals and gout. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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37. Hyperuricemia, urate-lowering therapy, and kidney outcomes: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
- Author
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Sharma, Gaurav, Dubey, Abhishek, Nolkha, Nilesh, and Singh, Jasvinder A.
- Abstract
Background: Contradictory evidence exists for association of hyperuricemia and kidney function. To investigate the association of hyperuricemia and kidney function decline (hyperuricemia question) and effect of urate-lowering therapies (ULTs) on kidney function (ULT question), we performed a systematic review and meta-analysis. Methods: MEDLINE, Embase, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, and CINAHL were searched from inception to July 2020. We selected observational studies for the hyperuricemia question and controlled trials for the ULT question. Two investigators independently assessed study eligibility and abstracted the data. Risk of bias was assessed using the Newcastle–Ottawa Scale and Cochrane risk of bias tool. Meta-analysis was done using the inverse variance method and random effect model. We estimated odds ratio (OR), hazard ratio (HR), risk ratio (RR), and the mean difference (MD). Evidence certainty was evaluated using the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) system. Results: Of 12,037 studies screened, 131 studies with 3,414,226 patients were included. Hyperuricemia was associated with a significant risk of rapid estimated glomerula filtration rate (eGFR) decline ⩾3 ml/min per 1.73 m
2 per year (OR 1.38, 95% CI 1.20–1.59; low certainty), albuminuria (OR/HR 1.94, 95% CI 1.34–2.79; very low certainty), chronic kidney disease (OR/HR 2.13, 95% CI 1.74–2.61; very low certainty), and kidney failure (HR 1.53, 95% CI 1.18–1.99; very low certainty). Compared with control, ULT use for ⩾1 year was associated with significantly more improved eGFR (MD 1.81 ml/min per 1.73 m2 , 95% CI 0.26–3.35; very low certainty), serum creatinine (MD −0.33 mg/dl, 95% CI −0.47 to −0.19; low certainty), and proteinuria (MD −5.44 mg/day, 95% CI −8.49 to −2.39; low certainty), but no difference in kidney failure. Conclusion: Hyperuricemia is associated with worsening eGFR, albuminuria, chronic kidney disease, and kidney failure. ULT use for ⩾1 year may improve kidney function. Registration: The protocol was registered at PROSPERO database, CRD42015013859. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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38. Gicht.
- Author
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Tausche, A. K.
- Abstract
Copyright of Der Internist is the property of Springer Nature and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. 2023 EULAR recommendations on imaging in diagnosis and management of crystal-induced arthropathies in clinical practice.
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Mandl P, D'Agostino MA, Navarro-Compán V, Geßl I, Sakellariou G, Abhishek A, Becce F, Dalbeth N, Ea HK, Filippucci E, Hammer HB, Iagnocco A, de Thurah A, Naredo E, Ottaviani S, Pascart T, Pérez-Ruiz F, Pitsillidou IA, Proft F, Rech J, Schmidt WA, Sconfienza LM, Terslev L, Wildner B, Zufferey P, and Filippou G
- Subjects
- Humans, Chondrocalcinosis diagnostic imaging, Gout diagnostic imaging, Gout drug therapy, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Evidence-Based Medicine, Radiography, Crystal Arthropathies diagnostic imaging, Ultrasonography methods
- Abstract
Objective: To formulate evidence-based recommendations and overarching principles on the use of imaging in the clinical management of crystal-induced arthropathies (CiAs)., Methods: An international task force of 25 rheumatologists, radiologists, methodologists, healthcare professionals and patient research partners from 11 countries was formed according to the EULAR standard operating procedures. Fourteen key questions on the role of imaging in the most common forms of CiA were generated. The CiA assessed included gout, calcium pyrophosphate deposition disease and basic calcium phosphate deposition disease. Imaging modalities included conventional radiography, ultrasound, CT and MRI. Experts applied research evidence obtained from four systematic literature reviews using MEDLINE, EMBASE and CENTRAL. Task force members provided level of agreement (LoA) anonymously by using a Numerical Rating Scale from 0 to 10., Results: Five overarching principles and 10 recommendations were developed encompassing the role of imaging in various aspects of patient management: making a diagnosis of CiA, monitoring inflammation and damage, predicting outcome, response to treatment, guided interventions and patient education. Overall, the LoA for the recommendations was high (8.46-9.92)., Conclusions: These are the first recommendations that encompass the major forms of CiA and guide the use of common imaging modalities in this disease group in clinical practice., Competing Interests: Competing interests: AA has received institutional research grants from AstraZeneca and Oxford Immunotech, royalty from UpToDate and Springer, lecture fees from Cadilla Pharmaceuticals, consulting fees from NGM Bio Limbic and Inflazome, all unrelated to the present work. AI has received honoraria, speaker fees and grants from AbbVie, Alfa-sigma, BMS, Celgene, Celltrion, Eli Lilly, Galapagos, Gilead, Janssen, MSD, Novartis, Pfizer, Sanofi Genzyme and Sobi. FB has received consulting fees from Horizon and has a research agreement with Siemens Healthineers. FP has received grants and personal fees from Novartis, Eli Lilly and UCB, and personal fees from AbbVie, Amgen, BMS, Celgene, Janssen, Hexal, Medscape, MSD, Pfizer and Roche outside the presented work. FP-R has received consulting fees from Arthrosi, Horizon, LG Pharma and Protalix; speaker fees from Horizon and Menarini; research grants from Cruces Rheumatology Association; fees in relation to trial committee or DMSB and Selecta-Sobi; and is on the steering committee of LG Pharma. HBH has received honorary for teaching from AbbVie, UCB, Lilly and Novartis and for participating in advisory boards from AbbVie and Novartis. JR has received unrestricted research grant from Sobi and Novartis, and speaker honoraria and consulting fees from BMS, Novartis and Sobi. LMS has received funding from Esaote SPA, Samsung Medison, GE HealthCare, Pfizer, Abiogen, AbbVie, Janssen-Cilag, Novartis, MSD, Merck Serono, Fidia Farmaceutici, RAW and EchoLight. LT has received speaker fees from Janssen, Novartis, GE and Eli Lilly, and is on the advisory board for UCB and Janssen. MAD'A has received speaker or consultant fees from Novartis, BMS, Janssen, Amgen, Boehringer Ingelheim, AbbVie, AstraZeneca, Pfizer, UCB and Eli Lilly. ND has received consulting fees, speaker fees or grants from AstraZeneca, Novartis, Horizon, Selecta, Arthrosi, JW Pharmaceutical Corporation, PK Med, LG Chem, JPI, PTC Therapeutics, Protalix, Unlocked Labs and Hikma. TP has received honorary from Novartis and research grants from Horizon Pharmaceuticals. VN-C has received consulting fees from AbbVie, Galapagos, Lilly, Novartis, Lilly, Pfizer and UCB, and speaker fees from AbbVie, Fresenius, Lilly, Novartis, Pfizer and UCB., (“© European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology, EULAR 2024. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC-ND. No commercial re-use. No derivatives. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ on behalf of EULAR.”.)
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- 2024
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40. Development and validation of a self-updating gout register from electronic health records data.
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Bürgisser N, Mongin D, Mehouachi S, Buclin CP, Guemara R, Darbellay Farhoumand P, Braillard O, Lauper K, and Courvoisier DS
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- Humans, Male, Female, Aged, Middle Aged, Aged, 80 and over, SARS-CoV-2, Gout epidemiology, Gout diagnosis, Gout drug therapy, Electronic Health Records, Registries, COVID-19 epidemiology
- Abstract
Objective: To develop an automatic gout register from electronic health records (EHRs) data., Methods: We analysed the EHR of all patients >18 years old from a tertiary academic hospital (2013-2022) based on six criteria: International Classification of Diseases 10 gout diagnosis, urate-lowering therapy prescription, monosodium urate crystals in joint aspiration and gout-related terms in problem lists, clinical or imaging reports. We assessed the positive and negative predictive value (PPV and NPV) of the query by chart reviews., Results: Of 2 110 902 outpatients and inpatients, 10 289 had at least one criterion for gout. The combination of joint aspiration OR diagnostic in the problem list OR≥2 other criteria created a register of 5138 patients, with a PPV of 92.4% (95% CI 88.5% to 95.0%) and an NPV of 94.3% (95% CI 91.9% to 96.0%). PPV and NPV were similar among outpatients and inpatients. Incidence was 2.9 per 1000 person-year and dropped by 30% from the COVID-19 pandemic onward. Patients with gout were on average 71.2 years old (SD 14.9), mainly male (76.5%), overweight (69.5%) and polymorbid (mean number of comorbidities of 3, IQR 1-5). More than half (57.4%) had received a urate-lowering treatment, 6.7% had a gout that led to a hospitalisation or ≥2 flares within a year and 32.9% received a rheumatology consultation., Conclusion: An automatic EHR-based gout register is feasible, valid and could be used to evaluate and improve gout management. Interestingly, the register uncovered a marked underdiagnosis or under-reporting of gout since the COVID-19 pandemic., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2024
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41. Optimising gout treatment: insights from a nurse-led cohort study.
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Rasmussen C, Larsen JW, Christensen HM, Larsen MB, Thomsen AM, Leishmann T, Kragh J, and Nielsen GL
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Aged, Prospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Practice Patterns, Nurses', Allopurinol therapeutic use, Disease Management, Gout drug therapy, Uric Acid blood, Gout Suppressants therapeutic use, Gout Suppressants administration & dosage
- Abstract
Objectives: Currently, gout management, particularly urate-lowering therapy (ULT), is often suboptimal. Nurses successfully manage various diseases including gout. As gout prevalence is rising, and rheumatologists and general practitioners face shortages, a new approach is imperative. This real-life prospective cohort study evaluated the effectiveness of nurse-led care employing a treat-to-target strategy for gout management over a 2-year period., Methods: All consecutively confirmed gout patients were included. The nurse-led clinic provided a structured treatment plan with consultations, patient leaflets, telephone contacts and laboratory monitoring. After a year of nurse-led care, patients transitioned to continued care in general practice. Follow-up data were complete through registries. The primary outcome was achieving target p-urate levels (<0.36 mmol/L) at 2 years after diagnosis. Secondary outcomes included treatment continuation and achievement of target p-urate levels in specific subgroups. The results were compared with patients diagnosed in the same clinic but followed up in 'usual care'., Results: In the nurse-led group (n=114), 83% achieved target p-urate levels and ULT was continued by 98%. This trend persisted across various patient subgroups. Only 44% of patients in usual care achieved target p-urate and with insufficient doses of allopurinol . Nurse-led care involved an average of two visits and three telephone contacts over 336 days. The 2-year mortality rate was 15%., Conclusions: Nurse-led gout care, employing a targeted approach, was associated with a very high uptake of and adherence to ULT. The encouraging results were not achieved in usual care although a direct comparison might be influenced by selection bias., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2024
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42. Application of the 2023 ACR/EULAR classification criteria for calcium pyrophosphate deposition disease in a seronegative rheumatoid arthritis cohort.
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Codes-Méndez H, Sainz L, Park HS, Corominas H, and Diaz-Torne C
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- Humans, Severity of Illness Index, Chondrocalcinosis diagnosis, Arthritis, Rheumatoid diagnosis, Arthritis, Rheumatoid epidemiology
- Abstract
Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared.
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- 2024
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43. Calcium pyrophosphate deposition disease: historical overview and potential gaps.
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Pineda C, Sandoval H, Pérez-Neri I, Soto-Fajardo C, and Carranza-Enríquez F
- Abstract
Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
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- 2024
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44. Gout and Levodopa: An unknown adverse effect?
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Quarteroni, Laura, Gastaldi, Romain, Baillet, Athan, Moro, Elena, Allenet, Benoit, and Khouri, Charles
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- *
DOPA , *GOUT , *PARKINSON'S disease , *DISEASE relapse , *URIC acid , *PRODUCT attributes - Abstract
We report the case of a 77‐year‐old man with Parkinson's disease (PD) who experimented for the first time gout crisis after the initiation of levodopa. Levodopa was withdrawn, and colchicine and allopurinol were initiated to treat the gout crisis. Because of PD progression, levodopa was reintroduced, and the patient presented relapse of gout flare. To further explore the association between gout and levodopa, we extracted and synthetized all Individual Case Safety Reports of gout associated with levodopa in the World Health Organization pharmacovigilance database, VigiBase®, up to April 2021. 43 cases of gout were reported in VigiBase® with drugs from N04BA ATC class. Levodopa was suspected in fifteen cases among which improvement was noticed in six cases (two after levodopa withdrawal, two despite treatment continuation, and two cases lacking details about action taken with levodopa); three cases did not recover; in the remaining six cases, evolution was not known. "Hyperuricemia" was not mentioned in the Summary of Product Characteristics of medicine containing levodopa; however, "abnormality biologics test with uric acid" was mentioned. Despite few cases of recovery after reduced doses of levodopa, the above‐described case of positive reintroduction was an argument in favor of the role of levodopa in gout flare. This study highlights a potential association between levodopa and gout through an analysis of the cases reported in the WHO pharmacovigilance database. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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45. Australian patient perspectives on the impact of gout.
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Coulshed, Andrew, Nguyen, Amy D., Stocker, Sophie L., and Day, Richard O.
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- *
GOUT , *PATIENT compliance , *SOCIAL impact , *SYMPTOMS , *SEMI-structured interviews - Abstract
Objective: To explore the perceptions of patients toward the impacts of gout, in an Australian context. Methods: Semi‐structured interviews were conducted with Australian patients with gout (n = 17). Interviews focused on the impacts of gout on patients' day‐to‐day lives. The interviews were audio‐recorded, transcribed verbatim and analyzed thematically by 2 independent reviewers. Results: Patients with gout reported variable but significant impacts of gout on their daily lives. Patients were primarily concerned with the pain and poor mobility associated with gout flares. Participants also reported significant social impacts related to their inability to attend events and the need for family and friends to look after them. Productivity was also negatively affected due to pain and poor mobility, and emotional wellbeing was reduced both by the symptoms of gout flares and anxiety between flares. Diet, daily planning, hobbies, exercise, sleep and selection of attire were also reported as being impacted by their gout. Conclusions: In Australia, gout has significant and preventable impacts beyond the physical symptoms of gout flares, across a variety of domains. By identifying patients' key concerns, this can potentially aid clinicians to tailor gout education and encourage medication adherence, in order to improve gout management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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46. Gout and hyperuricaemia in the USA: prevalence and trends.
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Singh, Gurkirpal, Lingala, Bharathi, and Mithal, Alka
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- *
GOUT , *HYPERURICEMIA , *INTERVIEWING , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *URIC acid , *DISEASE prevalence , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Objectives Several recent observations have suggested that the prevalence of gout may be increasing worldwide, but there are no recent data from the USA. We analysed the prevalence of hyperuricaemia and gout in the US population from 2007–08 to 2015–16. Methods We studied adults ⩾20 years of age from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey from 2007–08 to 2015–16. Persons with gout were identified from the home interview question 'Has a doctor or other health professional ever told you that you had gout?' Hyperuricaemia was defined as a serum urate level >0.40 mmol/l (6.8 mg/dl) (supersaturation levels at physiological temperatures and pH). Results In 2015–16, the overall prevalence of gout among US adults was 3.9%, corresponding to a total affected population of 9.2 million. Hyperuricaemia (>0.40 mmol/l or 6.8 mg/dl) was seen in 14.6% of the US population (estimated 32.5 million individuals). No significant trends were identified in the age-adjusted prevalence of gout and hyperuricaemia. Statistical comparisons between 2007–08 and 2015–16 age-adjusted rates were not significant. Conclusion While the age-adjusted prevalence of gout and hyperuricaemia has remained unchanged in the most recent decade from 2007–08 to 2015–16, the estimated total number of persons with self-reported gout has increased from 8.3 million to 9.2 million. The age-adjusted prevalence of hyperuricaemia has declined slightly, but the total number of affected individuals is virtually identical (32.5 million in 2015–16 compared with 32.1 million in 2007–08). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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47. Synovial fluid cell count of 84 930/mm
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Carter, Winberg and Karim, Ladak
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Crystal Arthropathies ,Arthritis ,Synovial Fluid ,Humans ,Cell Count ,Still's Disease, Adult-Onset - Abstract
In traditional teaching, synovial fluid cell counts over 50 000/mm
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- 2023
48. Imaging of cartilaginous lesions of the synovium - A Pictorial essay
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Subbarao
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synovial chondromatosis ,proliferative synovial disorders ,synovial hemangioma ,neuro ,crystal arthropathies ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
The major cartilaginous lesions of the synovium include primary synovial chondromatosis and secondary synovial chondromatosis. The imaging features of these two entities are different. The differential diagnosis includes pigmented villonodular synovitis, lipoma arborescence, synovial hemangioma, chronic tubercular and rheumatoid arthritis, neuroarthropathy and crystal arthropathies. Imaging findings of these entities are illustrated in detail.
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- 2017
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49. Identifying Potential Classification Criteria for Calcium Pyrophosphate Deposition Disease: Item Generation and Item Reduction
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Robert Terkeltaub, Hyon K. Choi, Augustin Latourte, Marwin Guitierrez, Alexander So, Janeth Yinh, Anthony M. Reginato, Lisa K. Stamp, T.L.Th.A. Jansen, Hang-Korng Ea, Mariano Andrés, Minna J. Kohler, Fabio Becce, Roberta Ramonda, Thomas Bardin, Tristan Pascart, Michael Doherty, Burak Kundakci, Georgios Filippou, Eliseo Pascual, Pascal Richette, Mark Matza, Chio Yokose, Nicola Dalbeth, Annamaria Iagnocco, Ann K. Rosenthal, Sara K. Tedeschi, Raymond P. Naden, William J. Taylor, John FitzGerald, Tuhina Neogi, Francisca Sivera, Jasvinder A. Singh, Fernando Perez-Ruiz, Geraldine M. McCarthy, Abhishek Abhishek, Frédéric Lioté, and Cattleya Godsave
- Subjects
CPPD ,calcium pyrophosphate ,classification criteria ,pseudogout ,Wrist Joint ,musculoskeletal diseases ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Crystal Arthropathies ,Knee Joint ,Steering committee ,Chondrocalcinosis ,Disease ,Calcium Pyrophosphate ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Expert committee ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Rheumatology ,medicine ,Humans ,business.industry ,Calcium pyrophosphate ,Rating score ,chemistry ,Item reduction ,Physical therapy ,Crystal deposition ,Item generation ,business - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Classification criteria for calcium pyrophosphate deposition disease (CPPD) will facilitate clinical research on this common crystalline arthritis. We report on the first two phases of a four-phase process for developing CPPD classification criteria. METHODS: CPPD classification criteria development is overseen by a 12-member Steering Committee. Item generation (Phase I) included a scoping literature review of five literature databases and contributions from a 35-member Combined Expert Committee and two Patient Research Partners. Item reduction and refinement (Phase II) involved a Combined Expert Committee meeting, discussions among Clinical, Imaging, and Laboratory Advisory Groups, and an item rating exercise to assess the influence of individual items toward classification. The Steering Committee reviewed the modal rating score for each item (range -3 [strongly pushes away from CPPD] to +3 [strongly pushes toward CPPD]) to determine items to retain for future phases of criteria development. RESULTS: Item generation yielded 420 items (312 from the literature, 108 from experts/patients). The Advisory Groups eliminated items they agreed were unlikely to distinguish between CPPD and other forms of arthritis, yielding 127 items for the item rating exercise. Fifty-six items, most of which had a modal rating of +/- 2 or 3, were retained for future phases. As numerous imaging items were rated +3, the Steering Committee recommended focusing on imaging of the knee, wrist, and one additional affected joint for calcification suggestive of CPP crystal deposition. CONCLUSION: A data- and expert-driven process is underway to develop CPPD classification criteria. Candidate items comprise clinical, imaging, and laboratory features.
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- 2022
50. Giant Tophaceous Gout: The Importance of Therapeutic Compliance.
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Silva Veiga R, Mesquita IB, Gomes da Cunha J, Fonseca JPM, and Pereira S
- Abstract
Gout is a metabolic disease resulting from the deposition of monosodium urate crystals in joints, tissues, and organs. Nowadays, the treatment of hyperuricemia is easily accessible and widespread and mainly consists of xanthine oxidase inhibitors and uricosurics. In refractory and advanced cases of gout, amputation surgery may be required. The authors present the case of an 85-year-old man who is non-compliant with hypouricemic medication, has exuberant gout, and has refused amputation surgery several times. The patient went to the emergency department with a triad of acute kidney injuries, acute gout, and poorly controlled pain. Cases of tophaceus gout such as the one presented are very rare nowadays., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright © 2024, Silva Veiga et al.)
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- 2024
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