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Guideline EULAR evidence based recommendations for gout. Part I: Diagnosis. Report of a task force of the Standing Committee for International Clinical Studies Including Therapeutics (ESCISIT). 2006
Zhang W, Doherty M, Pascual E, Bardin T, Barskova V, Conaghan P, Gerster J, Jacobs J, Leeb B, Lioté F, McCarthy G, Netter P, Nuki G, Perez-Ruiz F, Pignone A, Pimentão J, Punzi L, Roddy E, Uhlig T, Zimmermann-Gòrska I, Anonymous00035. · Academic Rheumatology, University of Nottingham, Clinical Sciences Building, City Hospital, Nottingham NG5 1PB, UK. · Ann Rheum Dis. · Pubmed #16707533 No free full text.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To develop evidence based recommendations for the diagnosis of gout. METHODS: The multidisciplinary guideline development group comprised 19 rheumatologists and one evidence based medicine expert, representing 13 European countries. Ten key propositions regarding diagnosis were generated using a Delphi consensus approach. Research evidence was searched systematically for each proposition. Wherever possible the sensitivity, specificity, likelihood ratio (LR), and incremental cost-effectiveness ratio were calculated for diagnostic tests. Relative risk and odds ratios were estimated for risk factors and co-morbidities associated with gout. The quality of evidence was categorised according to the evidence hierarchy. The strength of recommendation (SOR) was assessed using the EULAR visual analogue and ordinal scales. RESULTS: 10 key propositions were generated though three Delphi rounds including diagnostic topics in clinical manifestations, urate crystal identification, biochemical tests, radiographs, and risk factors/co-morbidities. Urate crystal identification varies according to symptoms and observer skill but is very likely to be positive in symptomatic gout (LR = 567 (95% confidence interval (CI), 35.5 to 9053)). Classic podagra and presence of tophi have the highest clinical diagnostic value for gout (LR = 30.64 (95% CI, 20.51 to 45.77), and LR = 39.95 (21.06 to 75.79), respectively). Hyperuricaemia is a major risk factor for gout and may be a useful diagnostic marker when defined by the normal range of the local population (LR = 9.74 (7.45 to 12.72)), although some gouty patients may have normal serum uric acid concentrations at the time of investigation. Radiographs have little role in diagnosis, though in late or severe gout radiographic changes of asymmetrical swelling (LR = 4.13 (2.97 to 5.74)) and subcortical cysts without erosion (LR = 6.39 (3.00 to 13.57)) may be useful to differentiate chronic gout from other joint conditions. In addition, risk factors (sex, diuretics, purine-rich foods, alcohol, lead) and co-morbidities (cardiovascular diseases, hypertension, diabetes, obesity, and chronic renal failure) are associated with gout. SOR for each proposition varied according to both the research evidence and expert opinion. CONCLUSIONS: 10 key recommendations for diagnosis of gout were developed using a combination of research based evidence and expert consensus. The evidence for diagnostic tests, risk factors, and co-morbidities was evaluated and the strength of recommendation was provided.
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Guideline EULAR evidence based recommendations for gout. Part II: Management. Report of a task force of the EULAR Standing Committee for International Clinical Studies Including Therapeutics (ESCISIT). 2006
Zhang W, Doherty M, Bardin T, Pascual E, Barskova V, Conaghan P, Gerster J, Jacobs J, Leeb B, Lioté F, McCarthy G, Netter P, Nuki G, Perez-Ruiz F, Pignone A, Pimentão J, Punzi L, Roddy E, Uhlig T, Zimmermann-Gòrska I, Anonymous00034. · Academic Rheumatology, University of Nottingham, Clinical Sciences Building, City Hospital, Nottingham NG5 1PB, UK. · Ann Rheum Dis. · Pubmed #16707532 No free full text.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To develop evidence based recommendations for the management of gout. METHODS: The multidisciplinary guideline development group comprised 19 rheumatologists and one evidence based medicine expert representing 13 European countries. Key propositions on management were generated using a Delphi consensus approach. Research evidence was searched systematically for each proposition. Where possible, effect size (ES), number needed to treat, relative risk, odds ratio, and incremental cost-effectiveness ratio were calculated. The quality of evidence was categorised according to the level of evidence. The strength of recommendation (SOR) was assessed using the EULAR visual analogue and ordinal scales. RESULTS: 12 key propositions were generated after three Delphi rounds. Propositions included both non-pharmacological and pharmacological treatments and addressed symptomatic control of acute gout, urate lowering therapy (ULT), and prophylaxis of acute attacks. The importance of patient education, modification of adverse lifestyle (weight loss if obese; reduced alcohol consumption; low animal purine diet) and treatment of associated comorbidity and risk factors were emphasised. Recommended drugs for acute attacks were oral non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), oral colchicine (ES = 0.87 (95% confidence interval, 0.25 to 1.50)), or joint aspiration and injection of corticosteroid. ULT is indicated in patients with recurrent acute attacks, arthropathy, tophi, or radiographic changes of gout. Allopurinol was confirmed as effective long term ULT (ES = 1.39 (0.78 to 2.01)). If allopurinol toxicity occurs, options include other xanthine oxidase inhibitors, allopurinol desensitisation, or a uricosuric. The uricosuric benzbromarone is more effective than allopurinol (ES = 1.50 (0.76 to 2.24)) and can be used in patients with mild to moderate renal insufficiency but may be hepatotoxic. When gout is associated with the use of diuretics, the diuretic should be stopped if possible. For prophylaxis against acute attacks, either colchicine 0.5-1 mg daily or an NSAID (with gastroprotection if indicated) are recommended. CONCLUSIONS: 12 key recommendations for management of gout were developed, using a combination of research based evidence and expert consensus. The evidence was evaluated and the SOR provided for each proposition.
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Review Current management of gout in patients unresponsive or allergic to allopurinol. 2004
Bardin T. · Rheumatology Federation, Lariboisière Teaching Hospital, 2, rue Ambroise Paré, 75010 Paris, France. · Joint Bone Spine. · Pubmed #15589427 No free full text.
Abstract: The manifestations of gout can be abolished permanently by lifelong urate-lowering therapy maintaining serum urate levels under 360 mmol/l, as this ensures dissolution of pathogenic crystals of monosodium urate monohydrate. Benzbromarone has been withdrawn from the market, leaving allopurinol as the only urate-lowering drug readily available in France. Allopurinol may induce unacceptable side effects, and in patients with dose-limiting renal failure it may not be sufficiently effective. Because allopurinol can induce serious side effects when given concomitantly with purine antimetabolites, it is contraindicated in organ transplant recipients. In patients who cannot tolerate allopurinol, dietary treatment, discontinuation of diuretic agents, and use of losartan or fenofibrate to treat concomitant hypertension or dyslipidemia, respectively, may ensure adequate control of serum urate levels. Desensitization to allopurinol can be attempted in patients with mild cutaneous hypersensitivity reactions but is difficult to perform and rarely used. Uricosuric agents may be helpful in patients with normal or diminished urate excretion. Probenecid is available in France from hospital pharmacies, and benzbromarone can be prescribed via a time-limited authorization procedure. Rasburicase, an Aspergillus urate oxidase produced by genetic engineering, is indicated to prevent acute hyperuricemia induced by chemotherapy for hematological malignancies. Factors that limit the use of rasburicase include the absence of a marketing authorization, the need for parenteral administration, and the absence of validated treatment schedules. Patients with renal failure precluding the use of effective allopurinol dosages are good candidates for benzbromarone therapy. Organ transplant recipients can be given benzbromarone, within the current restrictions to its use; alternatively, mycophenolate mofetil can be substituted for calcineurin inhibitors, which elevate serum urate levels, or for azathioprine, which contraindicates the use of allopurinol.
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Article Severe gouty arthritis and mild neurologic symptoms due to F199C, a newly identified variant of the hypoxanthine guanine phosphoribosyltransferase. 2009
Ea HK, Bardin T, Jinnah HA, Aral B, Lioté F, Ceballos-Picot I. · Hôpital Lariboisière, INSERM UMR-S 606, and Paris Diderot University, Paris, France. · Arthritis Rheum. · Pubmed #19565499 No free full text.
Abstract: A deficiency in hypoxanthine guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT) activity leads to overproduction of uric acid. According to the degree of enzymatic deficiency, a large spectrum of neurologic features can also be observed, ranging from mild or no neurologic involvement to complete Lesch-Nyhan disease. Herein, we describe a patient with hyperuricemia, juvenile-onset gouty arthritis, nephrolithiasis, and mild neurologic symptoms, attributed to a newly identified variant of the hprt gene, c.596T>G, resulting in the amino acid change p.F199C. Residual HPRT activity (8%) protected against severe neurologic involvement in this patient. Modeling of the mutated protein was used to predict the mechanisms that led to partial enzymatic activity. Careful neurologic examination is warranted in juvenile and middle-aged patients with gout, in order to detect mild symptoms that may lead to a diagnosis of HPRT deficiency.
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Article Toward a valid definition of gout flare: results of consensus exercises using Delphi methodology and cognitive mapping. 2009
Taylor WJ, Shewchuk R, Saag KG, Schumacher HR, Singh JA, Grainger R, Edwards NL, Bardin T, Waltrip RW, Simon LS, Burgos-Vargas R. · University of Otago and Wellington Regional Rheumatology Unit, Wellington, New Zealand. · Arthritis Rheum. · Pubmed #19333981 No free full text.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To identify, in people known to have gout, the testable, key components of a standard definition of gout flare for use in clinical research. METHODS: Consensus methodology was used to identify key elements of a gout flare. Two Delphi exercises were conducted among different groups of rheumatologists. A cognitive mapping technique among 9 gout experts with hierarchical cluster analysis provided a framework to guide the panel discussion, which identified the final set of items that should be tested empirically. RESULTS: From the Delphi exercises, 21 items were presented to the expert panel. Cluster analysis and multidimensional scaling showed that these items clustered into 5 concepts (joint inflammation, severity of symptoms, stereotypical nature, pain, and gout archetype) distributed along 2 dimensions (objective to subjective features and general features to specific features of gout). Using this analysis, expert panel discussion generated a short list of potential features: joint swelling, joint tenderness, joint warmth, severity of pain, patient global assessment, time to maximum pain, time to complete resolution of pain, an acute-phase marker, and functional impact of the episode. CONCLUSION: A short list of features has been identified and now requires validation against a patient- and physician-defined gout flare in order to determine the best combination of features.
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Article A modified Delphi exercise to determine the extent of consensus with OMERACT outcome domains for studies of acute and chronic gout. 2008
Taylor WJ, Schumacher HR, Baraf HS, Chapman P, Stamp L, Doherty M, McQueen F, Dalbeth N, Schlesinger N, Furst DE, Vazquez-Mellado J, Mellado JV, Becker MA, Kavanaugh A, Louthrenoo W, Bardin T, Khanna D, Simon LS, Yamanaka H, Choi HK, Zeng X, Strand V, Grainger R, Clegg D, Singh JA, Diaz-Torne C, Boers M, Gow P, Barskova VG. · Department of Medicine, University of Otago, Wellington 6242, New Zealand. · Ann Rheum Dis. · Pubmed #18055475 No free full text.
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: To reach consensus with recommendations made by an OMERACT Special Interest Group (SIG). METHODS: Rheumatologists and industry representatives interested in gout rated and clarified, in three iterations, the importance of domains proposed by the OMERACT SIG for use in acute and chronic gout intervention studies. Consensus was defined as a value of less than 1 of the UCLA/RAND disagreement index. RESULTS: There were 33 respondents (61% response rate); all agreed the initial items were necessary, except "total body urate pool". Additional domains were suggested and clarification sought for defining "joint inflammation" and "musculoskeletal function". Items that demonstrated no clear decision were re-rated in the final iteration. There were six highly rated items (rating 1-2) with four slightly lower rating items (rating 3) for acute gout; and 11 highly rated items with eight slightly lower ratings for chronic gout. CONCLUSIONS: Consensus is that the following domains be considered mandatory for acute gout studies: pain, joint swelling, joint tenderness, patient global, physician global, functional disability; and for chronic gout studies: serum urate, gout flares, tophus regression, health-related quality of life, functional disability, pain, patient global, physician global, work disability and joint inflammation. Several additional domains were considered discretionary.
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Article Rasburicase for tophaceous gout not treatable with allopurinol: an exploratory study. 2007
Richette P, Brière C, Hoenen-Clavert V, Loeuille D, Bardin T. · Université Paris 7, UFR Médicale, Assistance Publique-Hôpitaux de Paris, Fédération de Rhumatologie, Hôpital Lariboisière, Paris, France. · J Rheumatol. · Pubmed #17896799 No free full text.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the short-term safety and outcome of 2 different experimental applications of rasburicase 0.2 mg/kg (monthly vs daily) in patients with tophaceous gout not treatable by allopurinol. Rasburicase could be useful for patients with gout that is unresponsive to allopurinol or who cannot tolerate the therapy. METHODS: Five patients received 6 monthly infusions of rasburicase (Group 1) and 5 received 5 daily infusions (Group 2). RESULTS: In Group 1, serum uric acid (SUA) level decreased significantly, from 612.6 +/- 162.4 micromol/l at baseline to 341.2 +/- 91.8 micromol/l after 6 infusions (p = 0.001). Changes in tophus area were observed in 2 patients. In Group 2, daily infusions produced a rapid, marked decrease in SUA level during treatment. Yet SUA levels measured at 1 month (511.5 +/- 128.4 micromol/l) and 2 months (572 +/- 96.2 micromol/l) after treatment were not significantly lower than at baseline (573.6 +/- 48.2 micromol/l). No patient from Group 2 showed reduced tophus size. Eight of 10 patients experienced an adverse event, the most common being gout flare despite prophylactic treatment with colchicine. CONCLUSION: Monthly infusions of rasburicase appear to be a possible therapy for severe gout not treatable by other means. Tolerance of rasburicase in gout appears to be diminished by frequent triggering of gout attacks, and hypersensitivity reactions might be an important limitation to longterm therapy.
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Article Successful treatment with rasburicase of a tophaceous gout in a patient allergic to allopurinol. 2006
Richette P, Bardin T. · Department of Rheumatology, Centre Viggo Petersen, Lariboisiere Hospital, University Paris VII, France. · Nat Clin Pract Rheumatol. · Pubmed #16932713 No free full text.
Abstract: BACKGROUND: A 56-year-old white woman was referred to our institution with a 16-month history of severe, gouty, recurrent, acute polyarthritis involving the finger joints. She also had numerous small subcutaneous tophi in her hands. The patient was intolerant to allopurinol and had mild renal insufficiency attributed to uric-acid nephrolithiasis and interstitial nephropathy. INVESTIGATIONS: Physical examination, laboratory testing, X-rays of the hands, feet and pelvis, CT of the pelvis, microscopic analysis of an aspirate from a finger tophus. DIAGNOSIS: Tophaceous gout associated with urate nephropathy in a patient intolerant to allopurinol. MANAGEMENT: Acute polyarthritis was successfully managed by intravenous bolus methylprednisolone combined with codeine, diclofenac and low-dose colchicine. Rasburicase infusions combined with fenofibrate and sodium bicarbonate achieved to maintain serum acid uric below 360 micromol/l.
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Article Fenofibrate and losartan. free! 2003
Bardin T. · Fédération de Rhumatologie, Hôpital lariboisiére, 2 rue Ambroise Paré, 75010 Paris, France. · Ann Rheum Dis. · Pubmed #12759281 links to free full text
This publication has no abstract.
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Article Monosodium urate monohydrate crystal-induced inflammation in vivo: quantitative histomorphometric analysis of cellular events. free! 2002
Schiltz C, Lioté F, Prudhommeaux F, Meunier A, Champy R, Callebert J, Bardin T. · Laboratoire de Radiologie Expérimentale et de Physiopathologie Articulaire (JE2149), Centre Viggo Petersen, Hôpital Lariboisière, 2 rue Ambroise Paré, 75475 Paris Cedex 10, France. · Arthritis Rheum. · Pubmed #12115197 links to free full text
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To quantify the inflammatory cell response in rat air pouch pseudosynovial membrane during monosodium urate monohydrate (MSU) crystal-induced inflammation. METHODS: In the rat air-pouch model, we used a computer-assisted histomorphometric method to quantify cell distributions, based on cell linear densities, in histologic sections of membranes from pouches injected with MSU or saline. The volume, white blood cell (WBC) count, and histamine content of the pouch exudates were determined at several time points. RESULTS: Injection of 10 mg of MSU crystals into the pouch produced an acute exudate. After peaking at 24 hours, the exudate volume and WBC count decreased spontaneously over the next 3 days, simulating the self-limited course of acute gout. Membrane thickness followed a parallel course. Membrane polymorphonuclear cell (PMN) linear densities were closely correlated with exudate WBC counts, suggesting PMN recruitment from the subintimal synovial membrane. Both monocyte/macrophage and mast cell linear densities increased in the subintimal layer 2 hours after crystal injection (P = 0.038 and P = 0.03, respectively, versus controls), whereas PMN linear densities showed 2 peaks, one at 4 hours and the other 24 hours. The exudate histamine content peaked 6 hours after crystal injection, when mast cell linear densities were minimal in the membranes, suggesting mast cell degranulation. CONCLUSION: An increase in monocyte/macrophage and mast cell densities in the membrane preceded the PMN influx in the pouch membrane and exudate, suggesting that mast cells may be involved in the early phase of MSU crystal-induced inflammation, at least in this rat model.
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Minor Should prednisolone be first-line therapy for acute gout? 2008
Richette P, Bardin T. · No affiliation provided · Lancet. · Pubmed #18929902 No free full text.
This publication has no abstract.
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Minor International survey on the diagnosis and management of gout. 2007
Doherty M, Bardin T, Pascual E. · No affiliation provided · Ann Rheum Dis. · Pubmed #17998219 No free full text.
This publication has no abstract.
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