作者
Jiaojiao Jing,Jan T. Kielstein,Ulla T. Schultheiß,Thomas Sitter,Stephanie Titze,Elke Schaeffner,Mara McAdams‐DeMarco,Florian Kronenberg,Kai‐Uwe Eckardt,Anna Köttgen,for the GCKD study investigators,Kai‐Uwe Eckardt,Stephanie Titze,Hans‐Ulrich Prokosch,Barbara Bärthlein,André Reis,Arif B. Ekici,Olaf Gefeller,Karl F. Hilgers,Sílvia de Oliveira Hübner,Susanne Avendaño,Dinah Becker-Grosspitsch,N. Hauck,Susanne A. Seuchter,Birgit Hausknecht,M. Rittmeier,Anke Weigel,Andreas Beck,Thomas Ganslandt,Sarah Knispel,Thomas D. Dressel,Martina Malzer,Jürgen Floege,Frank Eitner,Georg Schlieper,Kate E Findeisen,E. Arweiler,Silvia Ernst,Marianna Durante Unger,S Lipski,Elke Schaeffner,Seema Baid‐Agrawal,Katja Petzold,Ralf Schindler,Anna Köttgen,Ulla T. Schultheiß,Simone Meder,Erna Mitsch,Ursula Reinhard,Gerd Walz,Hermann Haller,Johan M. Lorenzen,Jan T. Kielstein,Peter Obel Otto,Claudia Sommerer,C. Follinger,Martin Zeier,G Wolf,Martin Busch,Katharina Paul,Lars Dittrich,Thomas Sitter,R. Hilge,C. Blank,C. Wanner,Vera Krane,Daniel Schmiedeke,Sebastian Toncar,D. Cavitt,K. Schonowsky,Antje Börner-Klein,Florian Kronenberg,Julia Raschenberger,Barbara Kollerits,Lukas Forer,Sebastian Schönherr,Hansi Weißensteiner,Peter J. Oefner,Wolfram Gronwald,Helena U. Zacharias,Matthias Schmid
摘要
Reduced kidney function is a risk factor for hyperuricaemia and gout, but limited information on the burden of gout is available from studies of patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD). We therefore examined the prevalence and correlates of gout in the large prospective observational German Chronic Kidney Disease (GCKD) study.Data from 5085 CKD patients aged 18-74 years with an estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) of 30-<60 mL/min/1.73 m(2) or eGFR ≥60 and overt proteinuria at recruitment and non-missing values for self-reported gout, medications and urate measurements from a central laboratory were evaluated.The overall prevalence of gout was 24.3%, and increased from 16.0% in those with eGFR ≥60 mL/min/1.73 m(2) to 35.6% in those with eGFR <30. Of those with self-reported gout, 30.7% of individuals were not currently taking any gout medication and among gout patients on urate lowering therapy, 47.2% still showed hyperuricaemia. Factors associated with gout were serum urate, lower eGFR, advanced age, male sex, higher body mass index and waist-to-hip ratio, higher triglyceride and C-reactive protein (CRP) concentrations, alcohol intake and diuretics use. While lower eGFR categories showed significant associations with gout in multivariable-adjusted models (prevalence ratio 1.46 for eGFR <30 compared with eGFR ≥60, 95% confidence interval 1.21-1.77), associations between gout and higher urinary albumin-to-creatinine ratio in this CKD population were not significant.Self-reported gout is common among patients with CKD and lower GFR is strongly associated with gout. Pharmacological management of gout in patients with CKD is suboptimal. Prospective follow-up will show whether gout and hyperuricaemia increase the risk of CKD progression and cardiovascular events in the GCKD study.