Should clinicians reconsider standard therapy for gout?

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Gout occurs when urate crystals accumulate in the joints, and xanthine oxidase inhibitors such as febuxostat are a mainstay of therapy to help reduce blood urate levels in affected patients. A recent clinical trial published in Arthritis & Rheumatology has found that low doses of a less commonly used drug called benzbromarone may be a better option, however.

In the prospective single-center, open-labeled trial, 196 men with and low urinary excretion of uric acid were randomized to receive low-dose benzbromarone (LDBen) or low-dose febuxostat (LDFeb) for 12 weeks.

More participants in the LDBen group achieved the blood urate target of < 6 mg/dL than those in the LDFeb group (61% versus 32%). Side effects typically did not differ between the groups.

"The results suggest that low dosing of benzbromarone may warrant stronger consideration as a safe and effective therapy to achieve serum urate target in gout," the authors wrote.

More information: Superiority of low-dose benzbromarone to febuxostat in a prospective, comparative effectiveness trial in gout patients with renal urate underexcretion, Arthritis & Rheumatology (2022). DOI: 10.1002/art.42266

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Citation: Should clinicians reconsider standard therapy for gout? (2022, July 7) retrieved 26 April 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2022-07-clinicians-reconsider-standard-therapy-gout.html
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