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