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To print: Select File and then Print from your browser's menu Title: Febuxostat Better Than Allopurinol in Older Patients With Gout: Presented at EULAR |
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"Febuxostat Better Than Allopurinol in Older Patients With Gout: Presented at EULAR" By Chris Berrie BARCELONA, SPAIN -- June 15, 2007 -- Febuxostat, a novel, nonpurine, selective inhibitor of xanthine oxidase, achieves significantly greater reduction of serum urate (sUA) levels compared with allopurinol or placebo in older patients with gout and hyperuricemia, according to a subanalysis of two randomized controlled trials. The results were presented here on June 14th at the Annual European Congress of Rheumatology (EULAR). "The basic problem in gout is that you accumulate excess uric acid in the body, and the best way of getting rid of that uric acid is to block its production," indicated principal investigator Ralph Schumacher, MD, professor of medicine, department of rheumatology, University of Pennsylvania, and head of rheumatology, VA Medical Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. As this uric acid is produced by an enzyme called xanthine oxidase, both allopurinol and febuxostat have been used to target this problem in their roles as xanthine oxidase inhibitors. However, allopurinol also displays a range of hypersensitivity reactions. In particular, this can cause problems for patients with kidney disease due to clearance of the uric acid through this organ. "The reason why febuxostat is of interest is that it is not primarily secreted by the kidney, and it is a totally different molecule," Dr. Schumacher said. The objective was thus to determine the efficacy of different doses of febuxostat versus placebo and allopurinol in the treatment of hyperuricemia in elderly patients with gout, as a subanalysis of two randomized phase 3 clinical trials -- Febuxostat vs Allopurinol Controlled Trial (FACT) and A Phase III Randomized, Multicenter Allopurinol and Placebo-Controlled Study Assessing the Safety and Efficacy of Oral Febuxostat in Subjects with Gout (APEX). Of 1,832 patients who participated in these two clinical trials, 295 satisfied the entry criteria for the subanalysis, with a mean age of 70.6 years, mean body mass index (BMI) of 30.8 kg/m[2, aged 65 years or older, and with sUA level of 8.0 mg/dL or greater (male, 84.4%). These patients had gout for a mean of 15.4 years, 79.3% had a flare within the previous year, 9.2% had a history of renal calculi, and 26.5% had a history/presence of tophus. Their mean baseline sUA level was 9.62 mg/dL (range, 7.3-16.1), and 32% had sAU levels at 10.0 mg/dL or greater. |
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