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引用次数: 5

摘要

痛风是世界上最常见的关节炎。尽管在治疗选择方面取得了进展,但大多数痛风患者仍未得到充分治疗。国际指南(ACR、EULAR、3e倡议)明确规定了治疗目标:保持患者无急性发作,维持低尿酸血清水平(< 360µmol/l)。治疗目标策略包括治疗耀斑,降低尿酸治疗(ULT)和预防耀斑。几年来痛风指南的演变表明,ULT的适应症更广泛,在开始ULT的几个月内强制预防耀斑,并且在症状减轻后,耀斑患者应尽早开始ULT。秋水仙碱是首选的特异性闪光治疗,尤其对肾脏疾病、肝功能障碍患者或相互作用的患者需要谨慎使用。低剂量口服秋水仙碱是目前治疗耀斑的标准方法。非甾体抗炎药和强的松是有价值的替代品。白细胞介素-1阻滞剂可快速缓解耀斑,可能是慢性痛风和严重肾脏疾病患者的一种选择。黄嘌呤氧化酶抑制剂(xio)是ULT的主流,别嘌呤醇仍然是首选的xio。最近批准的XOI非布司他主要被肝脏清除,并能诱导尿酸盐更快的降低。尿尿药物如probenecid推荐给肾功能良好且不能达到XOI治疗目标的患者。在瑞士,只有两种降低痛风的药物别嘌呤醇和probenecid可用,这降低了治疗的可能性。治疗的成功常常因不遵守规定而受到阻碍。最近的指南强调了对患者进行教育以改善依从性的重要性。痛风患者常伴有代谢综合征、心血管和肾脏疾病等合并症。患有严重肾脏疾病的患者最难治疗:抗炎治疗的选择范围狭窄,必须非常小心地提高ULT,患者经常遭受反复发作的痛苦。另一个与治疗失败相关的因素是医生对指导方针的依从性较低。治疗失败可导致慢性和难治性痛风(多关节痛风,不受控制的耀斑活动,慢性滑膜炎,破坏性痛风),这使得进一步的管理非常困难。大多数痛风患者在初级保健机构接受治疗。慢性痛风患者或发展为慢性痛风的高风险患者(特别是患有严重肾脏疾病的患者或移植患者)应由风湿病学家进行额外治疗。
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[Gout management: an update].
Gout is the most frequent arthritis worldwide. Despite progress in therapeutic options the majority of gout patients are still insufficiently treated. International guidelines (ACR, EULAR, 3e initiative) clearly specify treatment targets: keep the patient flare-free and maintain a low urate serum level (< 360 µmol/l). The treat to target strategy includes therapy of flares, urate lowering treatment (ULT) and prophylaxis of flares. Evolution of gout guidelines over several years shows a broader indication for ULT, mandatory prophylaxis of flares during the initiation of ULT over several months and an earlier start of ULT in patients with flares as soon as symptoms have diminished. Colchicine is the preferred specific flare treatment, Caution has to be taken especially in patients with kidney disease, patients with hepatic dysfunction or in patients with interacting comedication. Low dose oral colchicine is nowadays the standard flare treatment. NSAIDs and prednisone are valuable alternatives. Interleukin-1 blockers offer a quick resolution of flares and may be an option in patients with chronic gout and severe kidney disease. Xanthinoxidase inhibitors (XOI) are the mainstay of ULT, with allopurinol still being the preferred XOI. The recently approved XOI febuxostat is eliminated mostly by the liver and can induce a faster lowering of urate. Uricosuric drugs such as probenecid are recommended in patients with sufficient renal function in whom the treatment goals cannot be reached with XOI. In Switzerland, only the two gout-lowering drugs allopurinol and probenecid are available, which reduces the therapeutic possibilities. Treatment success is often hampered by malcompliance. Recent guidelines stress the importance of patient education to ameliorate compliance. Comorbidities such as metabolic syndrome, cardiovascular and kidney disease are often found in gout patients. Patients with severe kidney disease are the most difficult to treat: the choice of antiinflammatory treatment is narrowed, ULT has to be uptitrated very carefully and patients often suffer from repeated flares. Another factor associated with treatment failure is the low physician’s adherence towards the guidelines. Therapeutic failure can lead to chronic and refractory gout (polyarticular gout, uncontrolled flare activity, chronic synovitis, destructive tophi) which makes the further management very difficult. Most gout patients are treated in primary care settings. Patients with chronic gout or at high risk for development of chronic gout (in particular patients with severe kidney disease or patients transplanted) should be additionally treated by a rheumatologist.
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