AB0802 Effect of Allopurinol and Febuxostat in Prolonging The Flare-Free Time in Gouty Patients with or without Prophylactic Treatment with Colchicine: A Retrospective Kaplan-Meier Analysis

BackgroundAmong inflammatory joint diseases, gout is a main cause of recidivism in urgency departments due to insufficient pain control or development of arthritis flares. This burden produces time and resources consumption and time of work off. New and old hypouricemic treatments are not only inten...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Annals of the rheumatic diseases 2016-06, Vol.75 (Suppl 2), p.1178-1178
Hauptverfasser: Guillen-Astete, C.A., Villarejo-Botija, M., Fuertes, L., Silvestre-Egea, G.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:BackgroundAmong inflammatory joint diseases, gout is a main cause of recidivism in urgency departments due to insufficient pain control or development of arthritis flares. This burden produces time and resources consumption and time of work off. New and old hypouricemic treatments are not only intended to control uric acid level below 6mg/dL but to reduce the number of flares per year. It is well known that their activity removing uric deposits could trigger new flares so prophylactic treatment is always recommended when those treatments are initiated. There are many studies conducted to compare hypouricemic effectiveness with those treatments, however, their impact in flare-free survival is a topic not previously studied.ObjectivesTo compare the effectiveness of Allopurinol and febuxostat in terms of recidivism in patients with gout flares.MethodsA descriptive retrospective study was performed. Electronic registries of patients diagnosed by gout and treated with Allopurinol (100–200mg/d and 300–600mg/d) and febuxostat (80mg/d and 120mg/d) with at least a gout flare were included. Prophylaxis treatment was considered as positive in patients on treatment with colchicine 0.5–1mg/día or NSAIDs according to the 2012 ACR Guidelines for management of gout (Khanna et al. Arthritis Care & Research, 2012: 64 (10); 1447–61). Follow up period was 2013–2015. Only patients with flares were included. Kaplan Meier curves were built considered censored any flare which took place after 6 months since the treatment started. Data recovered from electronic registries were: demographic and clinical data, number of consultations and work off time where appropriated. Comparisons were made according to hypouricemic treatment and colchicine prophylaxis treatment. No data about treatment compliance were considered.Results90 registries of different patients were identified: 18 were under treatment with febuxostat (14 on 80mg/day and 3 on 120mg/day) and 72 under treatment with allopurinol (22 on 100–200mg/day, 50 on 300–600mg/day). Difference on average of age, proportion of males and proportion of tophus were not statistically significant between both groups. Mean of time until the first flare after starting treatment with allopurinol was 132.4 SD 6.8 days (CI95% 119.0–145.8) and 142.6 SD 11.63 (CI95% 119.8–165.4) with febuxostat (Chi-squared 0.304; P=0.581, Hazard ratio 0.806; 95%CI 0.3935–1.654). Excluding patients without prophylaxis treatment (2 on febuxostat and 26 on allopurin
ISSN:0003-4967
1468-2060
DOI:10.1136/annrheumdis-2016-eular.4276