posted on 2019-10-30, 15:22authored byFernando Pérez Ruiz, Pascal Richette, Austin G. Stack, Ravichandra Karra Gurunath, Ma Jesus García de Yébenes, Loreto Carmona
Objective To determine the impact of achieving
serum uric acid (sUA) of <0.36 mmol/L on overall and
cardiovascular (CV) mortality in patients with gout.
Methods Prospective cohort of patients with gout
recruited from 1992 to 2017. Exposure was defined as
the average sUA recorded during the first year of followup,
dichotomised as ≤ or >0.36 mmol/L. Bivariate and
multivariate Cox proportional hazards models were used to
determine mortality risks, expressed HRs and 95% CIs.
Results Of 1193 patients, 92% were men with a mean
age of 60 years, 6.8 years’ disease duration, an average
of three to four flares in the previous year, a mean sUA of
9.1 mg/dL at baseline and a mean follow-up 48 months;
and 158 died. Crude mortality rates were significantly
higher for an sUA of ≥0.36 mmol/L, 80.9 per 1000
patient-years (95% CI 59.4 to 110.3), than for an sUA of
<0.36 mmol/L, 25.7 per 1000 patient-years (95% CI 21.3
to 30.9). After adjustment for age, sex, CV risk factors,
previous CV events, observation period and baseline sUA
concentration, an sUA of ≥0.36 mmol/L was associated
with elevated overall mortality (HR=2.33, 95% CI 1.60 to
3.41) and CV mortality (HR=2.05, 95% CI 1.21 to 3.45).
Conclusions Failure to reach a target sUA level of
0.36 mmol/L in patients with hyperuricaemia of gout is an
independent predictor of overall and CV-related mortality.
Targeting sUA levels of <0.36 mmol/L should be a principal
goal in these high-risk patients in order to reduce CV
events and to extend patient survival.