John, 68, used to plan his life around gout attacks. Even a single beer or a rich meal could land him in bed for days, gripping his swollen foot. He tried medications, but his doctor only adjusted them when pain flared. Then he joined a new kind of gout care plan—one that didn’t wait for pain to act.
Gout affects millions of adults worldwide. It’s caused by too much uric acid in the blood, which forms sharp crystals in joints. These crystals cause sudden, intense pain, often in the big toe. Over time, repeated flares can damage joints and form visible lumps called tophi. Current treatment often waits for symptoms. But for many, that’s too late.
The old wait-and-see approach fails many
Doctors have long known that lowering uric acid prevents flares. Yet most only start or adjust medication when patients report pain. This reactive method leaves uric acid levels high between attacks. That means crystals keep building, even when the person feels fine.
But here’s the twist: a new study shows that actively lowering uric acid to a strict target—below 0.36 mmol/L—works far better than waiting for symptoms.
Researchers in the Netherlands tested this in 308 patients. Half got standard care: start or adjust medication based on symptoms. The other half followed a treat-to-target plan. Doctors checked blood levels every few months and adjusted doses to keep uric acid low, no matter how the patient felt.
Uric acid is like traffic in the bloodstream
Think of uric acid like cars on a highway. In gout, too many cars pile up, causing a traffic jam. Crystals form like gridlock. The old way? Wait for a crash before clearing the road. The new way? Open more lanes and direct traffic before jams happen. Lowering uric acid steadily keeps the highway clear.
The study lasted two years. Patients in both groups were seen regularly. But only the treat-to-target group had set lab goals for uric acid.
Remission became twice as likely
After 18 to 24 months, researchers checked who was in remission. That meant no flares, no tophi, little pain, and feeling in control of the disease. In the treat-to-target group, 39% hit this mark. In the symptom-driven group, only 24%. That’s nearly twice as many people feeling normal.
Fewer flares. Fewer lumps. Less pain. And the strategy didn’t cause more side effects. In fact, the symptom-driven group had more adverse events—like kidney issues or severe flares—likely because their uric acid stayed high longer.
This doesn't mean this treatment is available yet.
But it should be. The drugs used—like allopurinol and febuxostat—are already approved and widely used. The change isn’t the drug. It’s how doctors use it. Instead of waiting, they monitor blood levels and adjust early.
Experts say this shift could prevent long-term joint damage. For years, guidelines have suggested a treat-to-target approach. Now, real-world evidence supports it.
Still, not every patient will benefit the same. The study included people with known gout and high uric acid, but not those with severe kidney disease or on other complex treatments. Older adults were well-represented, but women were underrepresented.
Results don’t apply to everyone yet
The study was done in rheumatology clinics in the Netherlands. Patients had access to regular blood tests and specialist visits. In areas with less access to care, this model may be harder to follow. Also, the trial lasted two years. Longer follow-up will show if benefits last.
Doctors say the next step is clear: train more clinics to use treat-to-target plans. Labs already check uric acid levels. The system just needs a nudge to act on them sooner.
For patients, the message is hopeful. If you have gout and keep having flares, talk to your doctor about your uric acid level. Ask if a treat-to-target plan could help. Blood tests are simple. And catching problems early could save your joints.
The future of gout care isn’t waiting for pain. It’s preventing it before it starts. With proven tools already in hand, the shift can begin now—no new drugs needed, just a smarter strategy.