Treat-to-target strategy improves gout remission vs symptom-driven care
This pragmatic, open-label RCT conducted at eight secondary care rheumatology centres in the Netherlands enrolled 308 adults aged ≥18 years with gout and hyperuricaemia who were not currently using urate-lowering therapy. Patients were randomized to a treat-to-target strategy (structured serum urate-guided titration of oral urate-lowering therapy to target serum urate <0.36 mmol/L, with first-line allopurinol and second-line febuxostat or benzbromarone) or symptom-driven management (physicians and patients decided whether to initiate urate-lowering therapy based on symptoms, with no specific serum urate target).
The primary outcome was remission during months 18-24 of follow-up, defined as absence of gout flares during months 18-24, no subcutaneous tophi at month 24, patient-reported pain score <2, and patient global assessment of disease activity score >8. Remission was achieved in 39.4% (57 of 145) of the treat-to-target group versus 24.0% (39 of 163) in the symptom-driven group, with an absolute difference of 15.4 percentage points (95% CI 6.4-24.4; p=0.024).
Adverse events occurred in 61 (42%) of the treat-to-target group versus 86 (53%) of the symptom-driven group (absolute difference -10.7 percentage points, 95% CI -21.8 to 0.4; p=0.060). No serious drug-related adverse events were reported. Discontinuations and tolerability were not reported.
Key limitations include the open-label design and pragmatic nature, which may introduce bias. The trial was funded by ZonMW and Reuma Nederland. In practice, a treat-to-target strategy was associated with improved long-term disease control compared with symptom-driven care, without evidence of increased adverse events, but the open-label design tempers certainty.