News

Gout Linked to Worse Heart Failure Outcomes


 

Major Finding: The rate of death or new heart failure hospitalization was 63% higher in the patients with gout than in those without gout.

Data Source: The analysis used administrative health record data from residents of the province of Quebec; 14,327 cases of people hospitalized for heart failure were compared with 143,255 controls.

Disclosures: None

ORLANDO — Gout boosted the risk of death or hospitalization for heart failure in an observational, case-control study of more than 150,000 patients with heart failure.

The analysis also showed that patients with heart failure and gout who were on long-term allopurinol treatment had a significantly reduced risk for death or heart failure hospitalization, Dr. George Thanassoulis said at the annual scientific sessions of the American Heart Association.

These findings do not warrant the use of allopurinol in heart failure patients without gout, but the data suggest that if such patients are candidates for allopurinol because of coexisting gout, then the new results “increase the reasons to treat them,” said Dr. Thanassoulis, a cardiologist at Boston University and the Framingham (Mass.) Heart Study.

He hypothesized that allo-purinol benefits heart failure outcomes not by lowering blood levels of uric acid, but by inhibiting oxidative stress and the endothelial dysfunction that oxidative stress produces.

The study used administrative health record data from residents of the province of Quebec who were aged older than 65 years. Cases were 14,327 people hospitalized for heart failure but without another heart failure hospitalization during the 3 years before the index episode, a restriction that helped ensure a uniform level of heart failure severity among the patients. Controls were 143,255 people in the Quebec database matched to the cases by follow-up duration and by calendar year.

The average age was 79 years among the cases and 77 years among the controls. Both the cases and controls were evenly split among men and women. Identification of gout relied on hospitalization, a physician visit, or a diagnostic code in the medical record.

During an average follow-up of 2 years, the rate of death or new heart failure hospitalization was 63% higher in the patients with gout than in those without gout, a statistically significant difference in an analysis that controlled for several demographic and clinical variables including age, gender, comorbidities, and medications.

The risk for death or heart failure hospitalization was even higher in patients who had acute gout, with a twofold higher risk in the adjusted analysis. The researchers defined acute gout as hospitalization or a physician visit for gout within 60 days of the index heart failure event.

Another pair of analyses looked at the impact of allo-purinol treatment. Among patients with an index heart failure event who also had gout treatment with allopurinol, there was a significant 31% reduction in the subsequent rate of death or heart failure hospitalization in the adjusted analysis. This benefit was limited to the patients on chronic allopurinol treatment for more than 30 days. Patients on allopurinol for 30 days or less showed no significant reduction in mortality or new heart failure hospitalizations.

Recommended Reading

Genetic-Test Algorithm Is Validated for CAD Assessment
MDedge Family Medicine
Antihypertensives Cut Events, but Not LVH, in Women
MDedge Family Medicine
PPI/Clopidogrel May Raise Risk After PCI
MDedge Family Medicine
Calcium Score Tweaks Framingham Algorithm
MDedge Family Medicine
Heart Failure Raises New-Onset Diabetes Risk
MDedge Family Medicine
Higher HDL Levels Linked to Cancer Rate Cut
MDedge Family Medicine
Congenital Heart Disease Survival to Age 18 at 89%
MDedge Family Medicine
CHD Ups Risk for Cardiac Event After Pregnancy
MDedge Family Medicine
Drug Tx Now First Choice for Asymptomatic Carotid Stenosis
MDedge Family Medicine
Anemia and chronic kidney disease: What’s the connection?
MDedge Family Medicine