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Patient-led urate self-monitoring to improve clinical outcomes in people with gout: a feasibility study. / Michael, Toni J.F.; Wright, Daniel F B; Chan, Jian Sheng et al.
In: ACR Open Rheumatology, Vol. 6, No. 7, 07.2024, p. 403-411.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Michael, TJF, Wright, DFB, Chan, JS, Coleshill, MJ, Aslani, P, Hughes, D, Day, RO & Stocker, SL 2024, 'Patient-led urate self-monitoring to improve clinical outcomes in people with gout: a feasibility study', ACR Open Rheumatology, vol. 6, no. 7, pp. 403-411. https://doi.org/10.1002/acr2.11666

APA

Michael, T. J. F., Wright, D. F. B., Chan, J. S., Coleshill, M. J., Aslani, P., Hughes, D., Day, R. O., & Stocker, S. L. (2024). Patient-led urate self-monitoring to improve clinical outcomes in people with gout: a feasibility study. ACR Open Rheumatology, 6(7), 403-411. https://doi.org/10.1002/acr2.11666

CBE

Michael TJF, Wright DFB, Chan JS, Coleshill MJ, Aslani P, Hughes D, Day RO, Stocker SL. 2024. Patient-led urate self-monitoring to improve clinical outcomes in people with gout: a feasibility study. ACR Open Rheumatology. 6(7):403-411. https://doi.org/10.1002/acr2.11666

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Michael TJF, Wright DFB, Chan JS, Coleshill MJ, Aslani P, Hughes D et al. Patient-led urate self-monitoring to improve clinical outcomes in people with gout: a feasibility study. ACR Open Rheumatology. 2024 Jul;6(7):403-411. Epub 2024 Apr 9. doi: 10.1002/acr2.11666

Author

Michael, Toni J.F. ; Wright, Daniel F B ; Chan, Jian Sheng et al. / Patient-led urate self-monitoring to improve clinical outcomes in people with gout: a feasibility study. In: ACR Open Rheumatology. 2024 ; Vol. 6, No. 7. pp. 403-411.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Patient-led urate self-monitoring to improve clinical outcomes in people with gout: a feasibility study

AU - Michael, Toni J.F.

AU - Wright, Daniel F B

AU - Chan, Jian Sheng

AU - Coleshill, Matthew J.

AU - Aslani, Parisa

AU - Hughes, Dyfrig

AU - Day, Richard O.

AU - Stocker, Sophie L

PY - 2024/7

Y1 - 2024/7

N2 - OBJECTIVE: Self-monitored point-of-care urate-measuring devices are an underexplored strategy to improve adherence to urate-lowering therapy and clinical outcomes in gout. This study observed patient-led urate self-monitoring practice and assessed its influence on allopurinol adherence, urate control, and health-related quality of life.METHODS: People with gout (n = 31) and prescribed allopurinol self-monitored their urate concentrations (HumaSens2.0 plus) at baseline and thereafter monthly for 12 months (3 months per quarter). Adherence to allopurinol was measured using medication event monitoring technology (Medication Event Monitoring System cap). Time spent below the target urate concentration (<0.36 mmol/L) was determined. Health-related quality of life was measured using a survey (EuroQoL EQ-5D-5L). Gout flares were recorded. Two-tailed Spearman correlation and the Wilcoxon matched-pairs signed-rank test (P < 0.05) were used for statistical comparisons. RESULTS: Most participants were male (94%) and had urate concentrations below the target (74%) at baseline. Overall, seven participants demonstrated repeated periods of "missed doses" (two or fewer allopurinol doses missed consecutively) and "drug holidays" (three or more missed doses). Most participants (94%) persisted with allopurinol. Time spent within the target urate concentration increased 1.3-fold (from 79% to 100%; P = 0.346), and the incidence of gout flares decreased 1.6-fold (from 8 to 5; P = 0.25) in the final quarter compared to that in the first quarter of the study. Health-related quality of life was reduced for participants reporting at least one gout flare (median utility values 0.9309 vs 0.9563, P = 0.04).CONCLUSION: Patient-led urate self-monitoring may support the maintenance of allopurinol adherence and improve urate control, thus reducing the incidence of gout flares. Further research on patient-led urate self-monitoring in a randomized controlled study is warranted.

AB - OBJECTIVE: Self-monitored point-of-care urate-measuring devices are an underexplored strategy to improve adherence to urate-lowering therapy and clinical outcomes in gout. This study observed patient-led urate self-monitoring practice and assessed its influence on allopurinol adherence, urate control, and health-related quality of life.METHODS: People with gout (n = 31) and prescribed allopurinol self-monitored their urate concentrations (HumaSens2.0 plus) at baseline and thereafter monthly for 12 months (3 months per quarter). Adherence to allopurinol was measured using medication event monitoring technology (Medication Event Monitoring System cap). Time spent below the target urate concentration (<0.36 mmol/L) was determined. Health-related quality of life was measured using a survey (EuroQoL EQ-5D-5L). Gout flares were recorded. Two-tailed Spearman correlation and the Wilcoxon matched-pairs signed-rank test (P < 0.05) were used for statistical comparisons. RESULTS: Most participants were male (94%) and had urate concentrations below the target (74%) at baseline. Overall, seven participants demonstrated repeated periods of "missed doses" (two or fewer allopurinol doses missed consecutively) and "drug holidays" (three or more missed doses). Most participants (94%) persisted with allopurinol. Time spent within the target urate concentration increased 1.3-fold (from 79% to 100%; P = 0.346), and the incidence of gout flares decreased 1.6-fold (from 8 to 5; P = 0.25) in the final quarter compared to that in the first quarter of the study. Health-related quality of life was reduced for participants reporting at least one gout flare (median utility values 0.9309 vs 0.9563, P = 0.04).CONCLUSION: Patient-led urate self-monitoring may support the maintenance of allopurinol adherence and improve urate control, thus reducing the incidence of gout flares. Further research on patient-led urate self-monitoring in a randomized controlled study is warranted.

U2 - 10.1002/acr2.11666

DO - 10.1002/acr2.11666

M3 - Article

C2 - 38591107

VL - 6

SP - 403

EP - 411

JO - ACR Open Rheumatology

JF - ACR Open Rheumatology

SN - 2578-5745

IS - 7

ER -