Conclusion. Chronic tophaceous and erosive gout is characterized by enhanced osteoclast development. These data provide a rationale for the study of osteoclast-targeted therapies for the prevention of bone damage in chronic gout.
There is a strong relationship between bone erosion and the presence of intraosseous tophus. These results strongly implicate tophus infiltration into bone as the dominant mechanism for the development of bone erosion and joint damage in gout.
Objective. To identify a valid method to measure radiographic damage in patients with chronic gout. Methods. The scoring method that best represented radiographic damage in individual joints was analyzed by comparing a gold standard rheumatologist consensus global score with recognized scoring methods, including the Sharp/van der Heijde erosion and narrowing scores, Ratingen destruction score, and Steinbrocker score. Ninety-five proximal interphalangeal joints from 12 patients with gout were included in this analysis. Scoring of hand and feet radiographs from an additional 35 patients with gout was used to analyze the sites to be included in a scoring system and the additional features to be recorded. Results. For individual joints, the combination of the Sharp/van der Heijde erosion and narrowing scores correlated best with the consensus global score. In addition, the limits of agreement were narrowest for the combined Sharp/van der Heijde erosion and narrowing score. All joint areas in the Sharp/van der Heijde rheumatoid arthritis score and the distal interphalangeal joints were affected by chronic gout and contributed to the total score. Additional features (extraarticular erosions, joint space widening, and ankylosis) occurred infrequently, and scoring of these features did not increase the reliability of the total score. The reliability of the total score was high: intraclass correlation coefficient for intraobserver reproducibility was 0.993-0.998 and for interobserver reproducibility was 0.963-0.966. The modified Sharp/van der Heijde score was able to discriminate between early and advanced disease. Conclusion. A modified Sharp/van der Heijde system accurately and reliably represents radiographic joint damage in chronic gout.
Measures of chronic and poorly controlled disease predict hand function in patients with gout. In particular, tophaceous joint disease has a major impact on functional capacity in gout.
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