Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts.
Arthritis Rheumatol. 2015 Feb;67(2):555-62. doi: 10.1002/art.38917.
Several plausible mechanisms and anecdotal descriptions suggest that gout attacks often occur at night, although there are no scientific data supporting this. We undertook this study to evaluate the hypothesis that gout attacks occur more frequently at night.
We conducted a case-crossover study to examine the risk of acute gout attacks in relation to the time of the day. Gout patients were prospectively recruited and followed up via the internet for 1 year. Participants were asked about the following information concerning their gout attacks: the date and hour of attack onset, symptoms and signs, medication use, and purported risk factors during the 24- and 48-hour periods prior to the gout attack. We calculated the odds ratios (ORs) of gout attacks (with 95% confidence intervals [95% CIs]) according to three 8-hour time blocks of the day (i.e., 12:00 AM to 7:59 AM, 8:00 AM to 3:59 PM [reference], and 4:00 PM to 11:59 PM) using conditional logistic regression.
Our study included 724 gout patients who experienced a total of 1,433 attacks (733, 310, and 390 attacks during the first, second, and third 8-hour time blocks, respectively) over 1 year. The risk of gout flares in the 8-hour overnight time block (12:00 AM to 7:59 AM) was 2.36 times higher than in the daytime (8:00 AM to 3:59 PM) (OR 2.36 [95% CI 2.05-2.73]). The corresponding OR in the evening (4:00 PM to 11:59 PM) was 1.26 (95% CI 1.07-1.48). These associations persisted among those with no alcohol use and in the lowest quintile of purine intake in the 24 hours prior to attack onset. Furthermore, these associations persisted in subgroups according to sex, age group, obesity status, diuretic use, and use of allopurinol, colchicine, and nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs.
These findings provide the first prospective evidence that the risk of gout attacks during the night and early morning is 2.4 times higher than in the daytime. Further, these data support the purported mechanisms and historical descriptions of the nocturnal onset of gout attacks and may have implications for antigout prophylactic measures.
有几种合理的机制和轶事描述表明,痛风发作通常发生在夜间,尽管没有科学数据支持这一点。我们进行这项研究是为了评估痛风发作更频繁发生在夜间的假设。
我们进行了病例交叉研究,以评估与一天中的时间相关的急性痛风发作的风险。痛风患者通过互联网前瞻性招募并随访 1 年。参与者被问及以下有关痛风发作的信息:发作开始的日期和时间、症状和体征、用药情况以及发作前 24 小时和 48 小时期间的假定危险因素。我们使用条件逻辑回归,根据一天中的三个 8 小时时间段(即 12:00 AM 至 7:59 AM、8:00 AM 至 3:59 PM[参考]和 4:00 PM 至 11:59 PM)计算痛风发作的比值比(OR)(95%置信区间[95%CI])。
我们的研究包括 724 名痛风患者,他们在 1 年内共经历了 1433 次发作(分别在第一、第二和第三个 8 小时时间段发生 733、310 和 390 次发作)。夜间(12:00 AM 至 7:59 AM)痛风发作的风险是白天(8:00 AM 至 3:59 PM)的 2.36 倍(OR 2.36[95%CI 2.05-2.73])。晚上(4:00 PM 至 11:59 PM)的相应 OR 为 1.26(95%CI 1.07-1.48)。在没有饮酒且在发作前 24 小时内嘌呤摄入量最低五分位数的患者中,这些关联仍然存在。此外,这些关联在根据性别、年龄组、肥胖状况、利尿剂使用以及使用别嘌醇、秋水仙碱和非甾体抗炎药进行分组后仍然存在。
这些发现首次提供了前瞻性证据,表明夜间和清晨痛风发作的风险是白天的 2.4 倍。此外,这些数据支持痛风夜间发作的假定机制和历史描述,可能对抗痛风预防性措施产生影响。