ACR Open Rheumatology (Nov 2022)

Characteristics and Outcomes of People With Gout Hospitalized Due to COVID‐19: Data From the COVID‐19 Global Rheumatology Alliance Physician‐Reported Registry

  • Kanon Jatuworapruk,
  • Anna Montgomery,
  • Milena Gianfrancesco,
  • Richard Conway,
  • Laura Durcan,
  • Elizabeth R. Graef,
  • Aruni Jayatilleke,
  • Helen Keen,
  • Adam Kilian,
  • Kristen Young,
  • Loreto Carmona,
  • Adriana Karina Cogo,
  • Alí Duarte‐García,
  • Laure Gossec,
  • Rebecca Hasseli,
  • Kimme L. Hyrich,
  • Vincent Langlois,
  • Saskia Lawson‐Tovey,
  • Armando Malcata,
  • Elsa F Mateus,
  • Martin Schafer,
  • Carlo Alberto Scirè,
  • Valgerdur Sigurdardottir,
  • Jeffrey A. Sparks,
  • Anja Strangfeld,
  • Ricardo M. Xavier,
  • Suleman Bhana,
  • Monique Gore‐Massy,
  • Jonathan Hausmann,
  • Jean W. Liew,
  • Emily Sirotich,
  • Paul Sufka,
  • Zach Wallace,
  • Pedro M. Machado,
  • Jinoos Yazdany,
  • Rebecca Grainger,
  • Philip C. Robinson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/acr2.11495
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 11
pp. 948 – 953

Abstract

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Objective To describe people with gout who were diagnosed with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID‐19) and hospitalized and to characterize their outcomes. Methods Data on patients with gout hospitalized for COVID‐19 between March 12, 2020, and October 25, 2021, were extracted from the COVID‐19 Global Rheumatology Alliance registry. Descriptive statistics were used to describe the demographics, comorbidities, medication exposures, and COVID‐19 outcomes including oxygenation or ventilation support and death. Results One hundred sixty‐three patients with gout who developed COVID‐19 and were hospitalized were included. The mean age was 63 years, and 85% were male. The majority of the group lived in the Western Pacific Region (35%) and North America (18%). Nearly half (46%) had two or more comorbidities, with hypertension (56%), cardiovascular disease (28%), diabetes mellitus (26%), chronic kidney disease (25%), and obesity (23%) being the most common. Glucocorticoids and colchicine were used pre‐COVID‐19 in 11% and 12% of the cohort, respectively. Over two thirds (68%) of the cohort required supplemental oxygen or ventilatory support during hospitalization. COVID‐19‐related death was reported in 16% of the overall cohort, with 73% of deaths documented in people with two or more comorbidities. Conclusion This cohort of people with gout and COVID‐19 who were hospitalized had high frequencies of ventilatory support and death. This suggests that patients with gout who were hospitalized for COVID‐19 may be at risk of poor outcomes, perhaps related to known risk factors for poor outcomes, such as age and presence of comorbidity.