Latest News

Benzbromarone tops febuxostat for gout?


 

‘Very useful’ in select cases

Weighing in on the results, Valderilio Feijó Azevedo, MD, PhD, adjunct professor of rheumatology, Federal University of Paraná, Brazil, noted that in some specific clinical circumstances, benzbromarone has been “a very useful medication, alone or combined, to treat gout patients.”

“We have great experience with the drug in Brazil. However, it is not used to treat all patients. Patients must be very well-selected in our clinical practice,” Dr. Azevedo said in an interview.

“For most patients, benzbromarone is effective for those who have failed to achieve serum uric acid goals with allopurinol treatment. We do not use it to treat patients with asymptomatic hyperuricemia. In general, we avoid patients with hepatic dysfunction due to previous hepatotoxicity reports. In every patient, we do active monitoring of enzymes,” Dr. Azevedo explained.

“We also avoid using it in patients with severe kidney disease. However, we have used it in some patients with estimated glomerular filtration rate less than 30. We also avoid dosage over 200 mg per day. On average, we use 100 mg per day combined with allopurinol or alone,” said Dr. Azevedo, who was not involved with the study.

Also weighing in, Michael Pillinger, MD, rheumatologist at NYU Langone Health, noted that while benzbromarone is not used in the United States, “in many parts of the world, it is used and is felt to be effective.” Dr. Pillinger was not associated with this current research.

This study, Dr. Pillinger said, “does underline the fact that an alternative drug that lowers urate by promoting urate excretion, if it could gain [U.S. Food and Drug Association] approval and if it were safe, could present a viable new option for therapy.”

He added, “If one conclusion to the study is that determining the basis of hyperuricemia is helpful in guiding benzbromarone use, that implies an additional layer of effort for physicians and patients in a disease that is already notoriously known for patient noncompliance – and in a case where febuxostat and allopurinol will work for both overproducers and underexcreters and would not need this additional assessment.”

The study was sponsored by Shandong Provincial Key Research and Development Plan, the National Natural Science Foundation of China, and Shandong Provincial Science Foundation for Outstanding Youth Scholarship. Dr. Terkeltaub was supported by the National Institutes of Health and the VA Research Service. Dr. Terkeltaub has received research funding from AstraZeneca, and has consulted with Horizon, Selecta, SOBI, Dyve BioSciences, Fortress, AstraZeneca, Allena, Fortress Biotech, and LG Life Sciences. Dr. Azevedo and Dr. Pillinger have no reported no relevant financial relationships.

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

Pages

Recommended Reading

Weight loss may be paramount lifestyle change in preventing gout
Clinician Reviews
COVID-19 vaccination recommended for rheumatology patients
Clinician Reviews
Two swings, two misses with colchicine, Vascepa in COVID-19
Clinician Reviews
‘Misleading’ results in colchicine COVID-19 trials meta-analysis
Clinician Reviews
Super-low uric acid may not be best for erosive gout
Clinician Reviews
Allopurinol found safe in patients with concomitant gout, CKD
Clinician Reviews
Gout app improves treat to target, reduces flares
Clinician Reviews
Methotrexate enhances pegloticase response in uncontrolled gout
Clinician Reviews
Alcohol consumption habits can predict gout tophi
Clinician Reviews
FDA approves combination pegloticase and methotrexate for refractory gout 
Clinician Reviews