학술논문

Gout, Hyperuricaemia and Crystal-Associated Disease Network (G-CAN) consensus statement regarding labels and definitions of disease states of gout
Document Type
article
Author
Bursill, DavidTaylor, William JTerkeltaub, RobertAbhishek, AbhishekSo, Alexander KVargas-Santos, Ana BeatrizGaffo, Angelo LinoRosenthal, AnnTausche, Anne-KathrinReginato, AnthonyManger, BernhardSciré, CarloPineda, Carlosvan Durme, CarolineLin, Ching-TsaiYin, CongcongAlbert, Daniel ArthurBiernat-Kaluza, EdytaRoddy, EdwardPascual, EliseoBecce, FabioPerez-Ruiz, FernandoSivera, FranciscaLioté, FrédéricSchett, GeorgNuki, GeorgeFilippou, GeorgiosMcCarthy, Geraldineda Rocha Castelar Pinheiro, GeraldoEa, Hang-KorngDe Almeida Tupinambá, HelenaYamanaka, HisashiChoi, Hyon KMackay, JamesODell, James RMellado, Janitzia VázquezSingh, Jasvinder AFitzgerald, John DJacobsson, Lennart THJoosten, LeoHarrold, Leslie RStamp, LisaAndrés, MarianoGutierrez, MarwinKuwabara, MasanariDehlin, MatsJanssen, MatthijsDoherty, MichaelHershfield, Michael SPillinger, MichaelEdwards, N LawrenceSchlesinger, NaomiKumar, NitinSlot, OleOttaviani, SebastienRichette, PascalMacMullan, Paul AChapman, Peter TLipsky, Peter ERobinson, PhilipKhanna, Puja PGancheva, Rada NGrainger, RebeccaJohnson, Richard JKampe, Ritch TeKeenan, Robert TTedeschi, Sara KKim, SeoyoungChoi, Sung JaeFields, Theodore RBardin, ThomasUhlig, TillJansen, TimMerriman, TonyPascart, TristanNeogi, TuhinaKlück, ViolaLouthrenoo, WorawitDalbeth, Nicola
Source
Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases. 78(11)
Subject
Arthritis
Inflammatory and immune system
Consensus
Gout
Humans
Hyperuricemia
Terminology as Topic
gout
hyperuricemia
language
monosodium urate crystals
nomenclature
terminology
urate
Clinical Sciences
Immunology
Public Health and Health Services
Arthritis & Rheumatology
Language
Abstract
ObjectiveThere is a lack of standardisation in the terminology used to describe gout. The aim of this project was to develop a consensus statement describing the recommended nomenclature for disease states of gout.MethodsA content analysis of gout-related articles from rheumatology and general internal medicine journals published over a 5-year period identified potential disease states and the labels commonly assigned to them. Based on these findings, experts in gout were invited to participate in a Delphi exercise and face-to-face consensus meeting to reach agreement on disease state labels and definitions.ResultsThe content analysis identified 13 unique disease states and a total of 63 unique labels. The Delphi exercise (n=76 respondents) and face-to-face meeting (n=35 attendees) established consensus agreement for eight disease state labels and definitions. The agreed labels were as follows: 'asymptomatic hyperuricaemia', 'asymptomatic monosodium urate crystal deposition', 'asymptomatic hyperuricaemia with monosodium urate crystal deposition', 'gout', 'tophaceous gout', 'erosive gout', 'first gout flare' and 'recurrent gout flares'. There was consensus agreement that the label 'gout' should be restricted to current or prior clinically evident disease caused by monosodium urate crystal deposition (gout flare, chronic gouty arthritis or subcutaneous tophus).ConclusionConsensus agreement has been established for the labels and definitions of eight gout disease states, including 'gout' itself. The Gout, Hyperuricaemia and Crystal-Associated Disease Network recommends the use of these labels when describing disease states of gout in research and clinical practice.