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Article pour les cliniciens

La gestion de la goutte: une revue systématique à l'appui du guide de pratique clinique de l'American College of Physicians.



  • Shekelle PG
  • Newberry SJ
  • FitzGerald JD
  • Motala A
  • O'Hanlon CE
  • Tariq A, et al.
Ann Intern Med. 2017 Jan 3;166(1):37-51. doi: 10.7326/M16-0461. Epub 2016 Nov 1. (Review)
PMID: 27802478
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Disciplines
  • Médecine familiale (MF)/Médecine générale (MG)
    Relevance - 6/7
    Intérêt médiatique  - 4/7
  • Médecine interne générale - Soins primaires
    Relevance - 6/7
    Intérêt médiatique  - 4/7
  • Médecine interne (voir sous-spécialités ci-dessous)
    Relevance - 6/7
    Intérêt médiatique  - 4/7
  • - Rhumatologie
    Relevance - 6/7
    Intérêt médiatique  - 3/7

Résumé (en anglais)

BACKGROUND: Gout is a common type of inflammatory arthritis in patients seen by primary care physicians.

PURPOSE: To review evidence about treatment of acute gout attacks, management of hyperuricemia to prevent attacks, and discontinuation of medications for chronic gout in adults.

DATA SOURCES: Multiple electronic databases from January 2010 to March 2016, reference mining, and pharmaceutical manufacturers.

STUDY SELECTION: Studies of drugs approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and commonly prescribed by primary care physicians, randomized trials for effectiveness, and trials and observational studies for adverse events.

DATA EXTRACTION: Data extraction was performed by one reviewer and checked by a second reviewer. Study quality was assessed by 2 independent reviewers. Strength-of-evidence assessment was done by group discussion.

DATA SYNTHESIS: High-strength evidence from 28 trials (only 3 of which were placebo-controlled) shows that colchicine, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), and corticosteroids reduce pain in patients with acute gout. Moderate-strength evidence suggests that low-dose colchicine is as effective as high-dose colchicine and causes fewer gastrointestinal adverse events. Moderate-strength evidence suggests that urate-lowering therapy (allopurinol or febuxostat) reduces long-term risk for acute gout attacks after 1 year or more. High-strength evidence shows that prophylaxis with daily colchicine or NSAIDs reduces the risk for acute gout attacks by at least half in patients starting urate-lowering therapy, and moderate-strength evidence indicates that duration of prophylaxis should be longer than 8 weeks. Although lower urate levels reduce risk for recurrent acute attacks, treatment to a specific target level has not been tested.

LIMITATION: Few studies of acute gout treatments, no placebo-controlled trials of management of hyperuricemia lasting longer than 6 months, and few studies in primary care populations.

CONCLUSION: Colchicine, NSAIDs, and corticosteroids relieve pain in adults with acute gout. Urate-lowering therapy decreases serum urate levels and reduces risk for acute gout attacks.

PRIMARY FUNDING SOURCE: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. (Protocol registration: http://effectivehealth-care.ahrq.gov/ehc/products/564/1992/Gout-managment-protocol-141103.pdf).


Commentaires cliniques (en anglais)

General Internal Medicine-Primary Care(US)

The article is a good summary of the evidence to support treatments for gout. Unfortunately, there doesn't appear to be any new information in the review that most clinicians haven't already seen. I do not believe there is much information within the review that would change outpatient clinical practice.

Rheumatology

This article reviews the treatment of gout from the perspective of value to a primary care physician and has a somewhat different perspective than the ACR guidelines. I liked it and found the discussion on prophylaxis when initiating ULT really valuable in a guideline. This is the most difficult advice to give to a primary care physician, and seeing it in a guideline provides me with a source that I can send a primary care physician to if they disagree with or have trouble accepting my recommendations on this.

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