From the Journals

Allopurinol dose not escalated enough to reduce mortality


 

FROM ARTHRITIS & RHEUMATOLOGY


However, a minority of dose-escalated patients achieved serum urate goal. Thus, inadequate escalation may have obscured any potential mortality benefit associated with the treatment strategy, the investigators suggested.

Current guidelines recommend starting gout patients on a low dose of allopurinol (100 mg/day or less) and then titrating up the dose slowly.


“While randomized, controlled trials of urate-lowering therapies have used static dosing strategies, such strategies are suboptimal and should now be considered unethical,” they wrote.

The researchers’ 10-year, observational, active-comparator study included 6,428 U.S. veterans with gout receiving allopurinol according to a dose escalation strategy, and 6,428 matched individuals not treated with an escalation approach.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Musculoskeletal ultrasound training now offered in nearly all U.S. rheumatology fellowships
MDedge Rheumatology
FDA approves once-daily treatment for hyperuricemia in gout
MDedge Rheumatology
Allopurinol extension trial backs treat-to-target approach in gout
MDedge Rheumatology
Febuxostat prevents early gout flares
MDedge Rheumatology
Gout incidence is intertwined with serum urate, but only up to a point
MDedge Rheumatology
FDA: Febuxostat may have increased heart-related death risk
MDedge Rheumatology
Higher water intake linked to less hyperuricemia in gout
MDedge Rheumatology
Rheumatology 911: Inside the rheumatologic emergency
MDedge Rheumatology
Health disparities in rural America: Chronic conditions
MDedge Rheumatology
Febuxostat increases cardiovascular mortality in CARES trial
MDedge Rheumatology