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– Gout is one of the most poorly managed diseases and is mostly treated by primary care providers, said a presenter at the annual meeting of the American College of Physicians. Failure to understand the disease process and goals of urate-lowering therapy (ULT) is a key barrier to achieving optimal gout therapy.

“There’s too much focus on the flare and too little focus on the urate burden of the disease. Regardless of the clinical setting, the goal should be to manage [high] serum uric acid levels,” said Lawrence Edwards, MD, professor at the University of Florida, Gainesville, during his talk.

Dr. Edwards, who specializes in treating patients with gout and rheumatoid arthritis, discussed the role of primary care providers in the treatment of gout. “We can and must do better,” he said.
 

Understanding the pathology of gout is key to effective treatment

Knowledge of the molecular pathology of gout has advanced drastically over the last few years. “The improved understanding of the molecules involved in disease initiation and progression can help us make better treatment decisions depending on the stage of the disease,” Dr. Edwards said.

Gout is caused by the deposition of monosodium urate (MSU) crystals, which starts as asymptomatic hyperuricemia, he said. Inflammatory responses to MSU crystals are responsible for gout flares, the frequency of which increases as the disease progresses.

Innate immune responses driven by macrophages and neutrophils play a crucial role in acute gout attacks. In the molecular pathway, proinflammatory cytokines IL-1 beta and IL-6 are the mediators of gout flares, whereas IL-8 accumulates over time and contributes to disease progression and systemic illness. If left untreated or undertreated, the repeated inflammatory reaction leads to advanced gout. The urate burden also increases with disease progression.

“Physicians need to better educate themselves on the destructive nature of this inflammatory arthritis and the need for effective urate-lowering therapy in the management of gout,” Dr. Edwards said.
 

Management of acute gout attacks

The management of gout flares involves the use of pharmacological agents to control pain and inflammation. The three most common anti-inflammatory therapies are colchicine, NSAIDs, and corticosteroids (either oral or intramuscular).

The choice of which of these should be used alone or in combination for a flare is based on previous tolerance of the medication or the presence of diabetes, kidney disease, heart disease, or a history of upper gastrointestinal bleeding. Dr. Edwards referred internists to the 2020 American College of Rheumatology gout management guideline.

“Regardless of which therapy is chosen, the more important consideration is how quickly the patients can start treatment after the flare begins,” said Dr. Edwards when asked about priorities in the management of gout flares. “This means that the patient should have ready access to whichever the chosen approach is. We call this the ‘pill-in-the-pocket’ approach,” he added.

Reducing the urate burden is also important for effective treatment. The serum urate level is the primary marker of how well a patient’s gout is being managed. ULT should be initiated in patients with subcutaneous tophi, gout-related radiographic damage, or frequent flares (≥ 2 per year). Allopurinol is typically the first-line ULT of choice.

Dr. Edwards noted that far too much focus is placed on flare treatment rather than addressing the underlying sources of gouty symptoms – the elevated serum levels of urate.
 

 

 

Management of advanced gout

“The management of advanced gout is challenging, and the dissolution of MSU is slow unless you take an aggressive approach,” Dr. Edwards said.

Switching to pegloticase is recommended for patients with frequent flares, nonresolving tophi, or high serum urate levels that persist despite treatment with xanthine oxidase inhibitors or other ULT agents.

“The frequency and severity of gout flares are what patients focus on, but if that’s the only focus of the treating physicians, then they are leaving the job less than halfway done. Getting the serum urate to below a level of 6.0 mg/dL is the most important aspect in the lifelong management of gout,” said Dr. Edwards.
 

Barriers to effective gout treatment

When asked during an interview after the session about the most important barriers to successful gout management, Allison M. Mays, MD, a geriatric medicine subspecialist at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, said that “the fact that gout mostly impacts quality of life and not necessarily mortality means that other things may take precedent.” She explained that gout typically coexists with other comorbidities, often multiple ones. Patients may also defer taking an additional medication for a disease like gout, which has only episodic discomfort.

She added that gout management involves shared decision-making between patients and the medical team – including the primary care physician, rheumatologist, orthopedist, and emergency physician. Following a visit to the urgent care or the ED for an acute flare of gout, the patient may not follow up with their primary care doctor or bring it up at their next visit for chronic management, she noted.

Dr. Edwards serves as a consultant to Horizon Pharmaceuticals, Atom Biosciences, Shanton Biosciences, and Aclaris Therapeutics. Horizon marketed pegloticase up until last month when Amgen bought the drug. Dr. Edwards is also president of Gout Education Society, and he has no financial agreement with any of the multiple companies that produce colchicine and allopurinol. Dr. Mays reported no conflicts.

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– Gout is one of the most poorly managed diseases and is mostly treated by primary care providers, said a presenter at the annual meeting of the American College of Physicians. Failure to understand the disease process and goals of urate-lowering therapy (ULT) is a key barrier to achieving optimal gout therapy.

“There’s too much focus on the flare and too little focus on the urate burden of the disease. Regardless of the clinical setting, the goal should be to manage [high] serum uric acid levels,” said Lawrence Edwards, MD, professor at the University of Florida, Gainesville, during his talk.

Dr. Edwards, who specializes in treating patients with gout and rheumatoid arthritis, discussed the role of primary care providers in the treatment of gout. “We can and must do better,” he said.
 

Understanding the pathology of gout is key to effective treatment

Knowledge of the molecular pathology of gout has advanced drastically over the last few years. “The improved understanding of the molecules involved in disease initiation and progression can help us make better treatment decisions depending on the stage of the disease,” Dr. Edwards said.

Gout is caused by the deposition of monosodium urate (MSU) crystals, which starts as asymptomatic hyperuricemia, he said. Inflammatory responses to MSU crystals are responsible for gout flares, the frequency of which increases as the disease progresses.

Innate immune responses driven by macrophages and neutrophils play a crucial role in acute gout attacks. In the molecular pathway, proinflammatory cytokines IL-1 beta and IL-6 are the mediators of gout flares, whereas IL-8 accumulates over time and contributes to disease progression and systemic illness. If left untreated or undertreated, the repeated inflammatory reaction leads to advanced gout. The urate burden also increases with disease progression.

“Physicians need to better educate themselves on the destructive nature of this inflammatory arthritis and the need for effective urate-lowering therapy in the management of gout,” Dr. Edwards said.
 

Management of acute gout attacks

The management of gout flares involves the use of pharmacological agents to control pain and inflammation. The three most common anti-inflammatory therapies are colchicine, NSAIDs, and corticosteroids (either oral or intramuscular).

The choice of which of these should be used alone or in combination for a flare is based on previous tolerance of the medication or the presence of diabetes, kidney disease, heart disease, or a history of upper gastrointestinal bleeding. Dr. Edwards referred internists to the 2020 American College of Rheumatology gout management guideline.

“Regardless of which therapy is chosen, the more important consideration is how quickly the patients can start treatment after the flare begins,” said Dr. Edwards when asked about priorities in the management of gout flares. “This means that the patient should have ready access to whichever the chosen approach is. We call this the ‘pill-in-the-pocket’ approach,” he added.

Reducing the urate burden is also important for effective treatment. The serum urate level is the primary marker of how well a patient’s gout is being managed. ULT should be initiated in patients with subcutaneous tophi, gout-related radiographic damage, or frequent flares (≥ 2 per year). Allopurinol is typically the first-line ULT of choice.

Dr. Edwards noted that far too much focus is placed on flare treatment rather than addressing the underlying sources of gouty symptoms – the elevated serum levels of urate.
 

 

 

Management of advanced gout

“The management of advanced gout is challenging, and the dissolution of MSU is slow unless you take an aggressive approach,” Dr. Edwards said.

Switching to pegloticase is recommended for patients with frequent flares, nonresolving tophi, or high serum urate levels that persist despite treatment with xanthine oxidase inhibitors or other ULT agents.

“The frequency and severity of gout flares are what patients focus on, but if that’s the only focus of the treating physicians, then they are leaving the job less than halfway done. Getting the serum urate to below a level of 6.0 mg/dL is the most important aspect in the lifelong management of gout,” said Dr. Edwards.
 

Barriers to effective gout treatment

When asked during an interview after the session about the most important barriers to successful gout management, Allison M. Mays, MD, a geriatric medicine subspecialist at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, said that “the fact that gout mostly impacts quality of life and not necessarily mortality means that other things may take precedent.” She explained that gout typically coexists with other comorbidities, often multiple ones. Patients may also defer taking an additional medication for a disease like gout, which has only episodic discomfort.

She added that gout management involves shared decision-making between patients and the medical team – including the primary care physician, rheumatologist, orthopedist, and emergency physician. Following a visit to the urgent care or the ED for an acute flare of gout, the patient may not follow up with their primary care doctor or bring it up at their next visit for chronic management, she noted.

Dr. Edwards serves as a consultant to Horizon Pharmaceuticals, Atom Biosciences, Shanton Biosciences, and Aclaris Therapeutics. Horizon marketed pegloticase up until last month when Amgen bought the drug. Dr. Edwards is also president of Gout Education Society, and he has no financial agreement with any of the multiple companies that produce colchicine and allopurinol. Dr. Mays reported no conflicts.

– Gout is one of the most poorly managed diseases and is mostly treated by primary care providers, said a presenter at the annual meeting of the American College of Physicians. Failure to understand the disease process and goals of urate-lowering therapy (ULT) is a key barrier to achieving optimal gout therapy.

“There’s too much focus on the flare and too little focus on the urate burden of the disease. Regardless of the clinical setting, the goal should be to manage [high] serum uric acid levels,” said Lawrence Edwards, MD, professor at the University of Florida, Gainesville, during his talk.

Dr. Edwards, who specializes in treating patients with gout and rheumatoid arthritis, discussed the role of primary care providers in the treatment of gout. “We can and must do better,” he said.
 

Understanding the pathology of gout is key to effective treatment

Knowledge of the molecular pathology of gout has advanced drastically over the last few years. “The improved understanding of the molecules involved in disease initiation and progression can help us make better treatment decisions depending on the stage of the disease,” Dr. Edwards said.

Gout is caused by the deposition of monosodium urate (MSU) crystals, which starts as asymptomatic hyperuricemia, he said. Inflammatory responses to MSU crystals are responsible for gout flares, the frequency of which increases as the disease progresses.

Innate immune responses driven by macrophages and neutrophils play a crucial role in acute gout attacks. In the molecular pathway, proinflammatory cytokines IL-1 beta and IL-6 are the mediators of gout flares, whereas IL-8 accumulates over time and contributes to disease progression and systemic illness. If left untreated or undertreated, the repeated inflammatory reaction leads to advanced gout. The urate burden also increases with disease progression.

“Physicians need to better educate themselves on the destructive nature of this inflammatory arthritis and the need for effective urate-lowering therapy in the management of gout,” Dr. Edwards said.
 

Management of acute gout attacks

The management of gout flares involves the use of pharmacological agents to control pain and inflammation. The three most common anti-inflammatory therapies are colchicine, NSAIDs, and corticosteroids (either oral or intramuscular).

The choice of which of these should be used alone or in combination for a flare is based on previous tolerance of the medication or the presence of diabetes, kidney disease, heart disease, or a history of upper gastrointestinal bleeding. Dr. Edwards referred internists to the 2020 American College of Rheumatology gout management guideline.

“Regardless of which therapy is chosen, the more important consideration is how quickly the patients can start treatment after the flare begins,” said Dr. Edwards when asked about priorities in the management of gout flares. “This means that the patient should have ready access to whichever the chosen approach is. We call this the ‘pill-in-the-pocket’ approach,” he added.

Reducing the urate burden is also important for effective treatment. The serum urate level is the primary marker of how well a patient’s gout is being managed. ULT should be initiated in patients with subcutaneous tophi, gout-related radiographic damage, or frequent flares (≥ 2 per year). Allopurinol is typically the first-line ULT of choice.

Dr. Edwards noted that far too much focus is placed on flare treatment rather than addressing the underlying sources of gouty symptoms – the elevated serum levels of urate.
 

 

 

Management of advanced gout

“The management of advanced gout is challenging, and the dissolution of MSU is slow unless you take an aggressive approach,” Dr. Edwards said.

Switching to pegloticase is recommended for patients with frequent flares, nonresolving tophi, or high serum urate levels that persist despite treatment with xanthine oxidase inhibitors or other ULT agents.

“The frequency and severity of gout flares are what patients focus on, but if that’s the only focus of the treating physicians, then they are leaving the job less than halfway done. Getting the serum urate to below a level of 6.0 mg/dL is the most important aspect in the lifelong management of gout,” said Dr. Edwards.
 

Barriers to effective gout treatment

When asked during an interview after the session about the most important barriers to successful gout management, Allison M. Mays, MD, a geriatric medicine subspecialist at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, said that “the fact that gout mostly impacts quality of life and not necessarily mortality means that other things may take precedent.” She explained that gout typically coexists with other comorbidities, often multiple ones. Patients may also defer taking an additional medication for a disease like gout, which has only episodic discomfort.

She added that gout management involves shared decision-making between patients and the medical team – including the primary care physician, rheumatologist, orthopedist, and emergency physician. Following a visit to the urgent care or the ED for an acute flare of gout, the patient may not follow up with their primary care doctor or bring it up at their next visit for chronic management, she noted.

Dr. Edwards serves as a consultant to Horizon Pharmaceuticals, Atom Biosciences, Shanton Biosciences, and Aclaris Therapeutics. Horizon marketed pegloticase up until last month when Amgen bought the drug. Dr. Edwards is also president of Gout Education Society, and he has no financial agreement with any of the multiple companies that produce colchicine and allopurinol. Dr. Mays reported no conflicts.

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