Nuria Perez-Herrero, Ana M. Herrero-Beites, Jose M. Urbizu-Gallardo, Fernando Perez-Ruiz
Affiliation(s):
Medicine & Nursery School, University Of The Basque Country
Aim: To compare the rate of acute kidney injury (AKI) associated with non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) through two consecutive decades in patients with gout and to study factors associated with AKI events.
Methods: Retrospective analysis of data from Jan 1994 to Dec 2024. Data on AKI and upper gastrointestinal bleeding (UGB) were collected during the same period (2005–2024), along with general (age, gender, time from onset), gout-related (tophi, imaging, clinical distribution, number of flares), treatment-related (diuretic and urate-lowering medications, exposure to the triple whammy), and comorbidities-related variables (hypertension, hyperlipidemia, diabetes, chronic kidney disease). Analysis was made for the whole cohort and comparing decades with each other. Survival analysis was performed to evaluate those variables independently associated with a higher risk of AKI.
Results: 1,207 cases were available for analysis. The overall cumulated rate of AKI was 13.3%, showing an increase from 9.9% to 16.1% from the first to the second decades, respectively, but no change in the severity of AKI was observed. In contrast, there was no change in the rate of UGB through the two decades (close to 2%). There was an increase in the frequency of gout severity variables, triple whammy exposure, and comorbid conditions through the two decades. Age, tophaceous gout, chronic kidney disease, triple whammy exposure, were variables independently associated with a higher risk of AKI, while urate-lowering prescription was associated with a lower risk.
Conclusions: An increase in the rate of AKI was observed through the two decades studied, associated with an increase in gout severity, comorbidity, and exposure to triple whammy. Chronic kidney disease and exposure to triple whammy in older patients with severe (tophaceous) gout seem to define the combination for the highest risk, in whom the avoidance of NSAIDs should be carefully considered.