Title: Drug Therapy of Gout
1 2What Is Gout?
A medical condition caused by an increase in the
level of uric acid gtgt urate crystals , causing
inflammatory responses around some joints of the
body ( Gouty arthritis )
3Case presentation ( Gouty arthritis)
- 55 y/o male
- 12 hours pain in my big toe ankle
- went to bed last night feeling fine
- felt as if had broken toe this morning
- PMH of similar problems in right ankle left
wrist
4Gout - acute arthritis
acute synovitis, ankle first MTP joints
Redness and swelling are noticed around those
joints in particular
The metatarsophalangeal articulations are the
joints between the metatarsal bones of the foot
and the proximal bones
5Gout - acute bursitis
acute olecranon bursitis
Bursitis is inflammation of the fluid-filled sac
(bursa) that lies between a tendon and skin, or
between a tendon and bone
6Gouty arthritis - characteristics
- sudden onset
- middle aged males
- severe pain
- distal joints
- Intense inflammation
- recurrent episodes
- influenced by diet ( since uric acid level is
influenced by our dietary intake of purines) - bony erosions on Xray
7Monosodium urate crystals
These crystals show
1-needle shape 2-negative birefringence
(Birefringence double streams of light, usually
in prisms, etc)
Diagnosis is done by taking a biopsy from the
synovial fluid and then examined either by
8Crystal-induced inflammation (from gout to gouty
arthritis )
PMN is critical component of crystal-induced
inflammation
9Gouty arthritis - characteristics
- sudden onset
- middle aged males
- severe pain
- distal joints
- intense inflammation
- recurrent episodes
- influenced by diet
- bony erosions on Xray
- Hyperuricemia (always)
10Hyperuricemia
hyperuricemia results when production exceeds
excretion (either by over production or less
excretion )
11Hyperuricemia
net uric acid loss results when excretion exceeds
production
12Chronic tophaceous gout
tophus localized deposit of monosodium urate
crystals could also be in several places in
the body
13Gout - tophus
classic location of tophi on helix of ear
14Gout - X-ray changes
DIP (Distal interphalangeal joint) joint
destruction
phalangeal bone cysts
15Gout - X-ray changes
bony erosions
16Gout - cardinal manifestations
kidneys should be functioning well in order to
use classical treatment
17Drug therapy of gout
Treatment targets either 1- Decrease Uric Acid
Formation 2- Increase Uric Acid Excretion
18Uric acid
The Role of Uric Acid in Gout
- end product of purine metabolism
- serum uric acid level dependent upon
- rate of uric acid production
- efficiency of renal uric acid excretion
19Uric acid metabolism
One method of reducing uric acid levels , is
inhibition of the enzyme xanthine oxidase
xanthine oxidase catalyzes hypoxanthine to
xanthine xanthine to uric acid
20Renal handling of uric acid
Fate of uric acid in kidneys
Uric acid
- glomerular filtration
- tubular reabsorption
- tubular excretion
- post-secretory reabsorption
- net excretion
Uric acid
Uric acid
Uric acid
The goal of some Gout Drugs, is to Increase the
net excretion of uric acid from the kidneys.
21The goal of some Gout Drugs, is to Increase the
net excretion of uric acid from the kidneys Non
steroidal anti-inflammatory Drugs are sometimes
used in the treatment of Gout ( cause increase in
excretion ) Aspirin on the other hand is never
used
22Gout - problems
- excessive total body levels of uric acid
- deposition of monosodium urate crystals in joints
other tissues - crystal-induced inflammation
23Treating acute gouty arthritis
- colchicine
- NSAIDs
- steroids
- rest, analgesia, ice, time
24Drugs used to treat gout
Urate Lowering Drugs For chronic cases
Acute Arthritis Drugs
Its a new drug thats being developed
rest analgesia time
25Drugs used to treat gout
- NSAIDs
- Indomethacin (Indocin) 25 to 50 mg four times
daily - Naproxen (Naprosyn) 500 mg two times daily
- Ibuprofen (Motrin) 800 mg four times daily
- Sulindac (Clinoril) 200 mg two times daily
- Ketoprofen (Orudis) 75 mg four times daily
-
Dont memorize the doses, just the names
Remember that Aspirin is never used
26Colchicine - plant alkaloid
colchicum autumnale (autumn crocus or meadow
saffron)
27Correction for the previous lecture
Colchicine is used to prevent the polymerization
of the cells cytoskeleton by binding to TUBULIN
( not Actin)
28Colchicine
- only effective in gouty arthritis ( it only
works on the inflammation process , and has
nothing to do with uric acid levels .) - not an analgesic
- does not affect renal excretion of uric acid
- does not alter plasma solubility of uric acid
- neither raises nor lowers serum uric acid
29Colchicine
- Colchicine inhibits microtubule polymerization by
binding to tubulin, one of the main constituents
of microtubules - reduces inflammatory response to deposited
crystals - diminishes PMN phagocytosis of crystals
- blocks cellular response to deposited crystals
30Crystal-induced inflammation
PMN is critical component of crystal-induced
inflammation
31Colchicine - indications
Dose Indication
high treatment of acute gouty arthritis
low prevention of recurrent gouty arthritis
Its better to use xanthine oxidase inhibitors
for
32Colchicine - toxicity
Associated with high doses
- gastrointestinal (nausea, vomiting, cramping,
diarrhea, abdominal pain) - hematologic (agranulocytosis, aplastic anemia,
thrombocytopenia) - muscular weakness
adverse effects dose-related more common when
patient has renal or hepatic disease
33Gout - colchicine therapy
- more useful for daily prophylaxis (low dose)
- prevents recurrent attacks
- colchicine 0.6 mg qd - bid
- declining use in acute gout (high dose)
34Colchicine - Cancers
- Promising studies have recently shown that
Colchicine could be used for treating tumors - HOW ?
- Since Colchicine prevents the formation of
microtubules , this could be useful in limiting
the mitotic activity of tumors cell by
preventing the formation of mitotic spindles
(microtubules .)
35Hyperuricemia - mechanisms
36Urate-lowering drugs
37Gout - urate-lowering therapy
Xanthine Oxidase as an example
- prevents arthritis, tophi stones by lowering
total body pool of uric acid - not indicated after first attack
- initiation of therapy can worsen or bring on
acute gouty arthritis - no role to play in managing acute gout
38Drug therapy of gout
Drugs That Block Production of Uric Acid
39Uric acid metabolism
xanthine oxidase catalyzes hypoxanthine to
xanthine xanthine to uric acid
40Allopurinol (Zyloprim)
- inhibitor of xanthine oxidase
- effectively blocks formation of uric acid
- how supplied - 100 mg 300 mg tablets
- pregnancy category C
Drugs are characterized according to their
effects on pregnancy (fetus) into several
categories A,B,C,D,X. A is the safest, X
completely dangerous and should not be given to
pregnant women benefits from taking the drug
must outweigh its risks in order for it to be
used.
41Allopurinol - usage indications
- management of hyperuricemia of gout
- management of hyperuricemia associated with
chemotherapy - prevention of recurrent calcium oxalate kidney
stones
42Allopurinol - common reactions
- diarrhea, nausea, abnormal liver tests
- acute attacks of gout
- rash
Manufactures are obliged to put a special
indication on each leaflet ( a BLACK BOX) , that
explains the serious side effect for that
particular drug e.g Isotretinoin is a highly
teratogenic Drug that should have a BLACK
BOX For Allopurinol you might find that BLACK
BOX sometimes , because certain people have
shown to have allergy for it .
43Allopurinol - serious reactions
- fever, rash, toxic epidermal necrolysis
- hepatotoxicity, marrow suppression
- vasculitis
- drug interactions (ampicillin(antibiotic),
thiazides(diuretic ), mercaptopurine,
azathioprine(anti-cancer) - death
44Stevens-Johnson syndrome
Another serious side effect , characterized by
Mucocutaenous ulcerations target skin
lesions mucous membrane erosions epidermal
necrosis with skin detachment
Those side effects are treated by systemic
corticosteroids
45Allopurinol hypersensitivity
- extremely serious problem
- prompt recognition required
- first sign usually skin rash
- more common with impaired renal function
- progression to toxic epidermal necrolysis death
46Febuxostat
- recently approved by FDA (not on market)
- oral xanthine oxidase inhibitor
- chemically distinct from allopurinol
- 94 of patients reached urate lt 6.0 mg/dl
- minimal adverse events
- can be used in patients with renal disease
47PEG-uricase (Polyethelene Glycol)
- Uricase enzyme that degrades uric acid
- investigational drug
- PEG-conjugate of recombinant porcine uricase
- treatment-resistant gout
- uricase speeds resolution of tophi
- further research needed
48Drug therapy of gout
Drugs That Enhance Excretion of Uric Acid
49Uricosuric therapy
- probenecid
- blocks tubular reabsorption of uric acid
- enhances urine uric acid excretion
- increases urine uric acid level
- decreases serum uric acid level
50Uricosuric therapy
- moderately effective
- increases risk of nephrolithiasis
- not used in patients with renal disease
- frequent, but mild, side effects
51Uricosuric therapy
- contra-indications
- history of nephrolithiasis
- elevated urine uric acid level
- existing renal disease
- less effective in elderly patients
52Choosing a urate-lowering drug
xanthine oxidase inhibitor
uricosuric agent
53Drug therapy of gout
Case Presentation Refer to the third slide
54Case presentation - therapy
Maintenance dose
Anti-inflammatory
Chronic condition
55Done by Anas Khalil With the help of shaima
shahins Notes