Kahl L E, Thompson M E, Griffith B P
Department of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pennsylvania.
Am J Med. 1989 Sep;87(3):289-94. doi: 10.1016/s0002-9343(89)80153-6.
Hyperuricemia and gouty arthritis have been associated with cyclosporine use in renal transplant recipients. Patients requiring heart or heart-lung transplantation may have additional risk factors for the development of gout, yet it has not previously been described in this population. We share herein our clinical experience with gouty arthritis in six heart transplant recipients.
During a one-year period, six hospitalized male heart transplant patients were seen in consultation for gouty arthritis. Five were subsequently followed for gout as outpatients; the sixth died within six months. Management included trials of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), colchicine, allopurinol, and intra-articular steroid injections, as well as attempts to minimize cyclosporine nephrotoxicity.
Three patients had gout in remission at time of transplant surgery, and three others developed gout for the first time two to 45 months after transplantation. Following transplant surgery, both pre-existing and new-onset gout appeared to exhibit an accelerated course, with unusually rapid development of chronic polyarticular disease and tophi in four of the five patients followed for more than six months. Peak serum uric acid levels ranged from 11.0 mg/dL to 16.5 mg/dL. NSAIDs produced reversible renal insufficiency in four patients. Gout-related infections occurred in three patients, one of whom died.
Acute gouty arthritis may occur in the heart transplant recipient despite concomitant use of immunosuppressive drugs. Cyclosporine, with its attendant hypertension and nephrotoxicity, appears to be the major risk factor for hyperuricemia in this setting, leading to the accelerated development of tophi and chronic polyarthritis. Management is complicated by the patients' renal insufficiency and propensity to infection, as well as by interaction with transplant-related medications. Prevention of hyperuricemia by minimizing cyclosporine nephrotoxicity appears to be the best management strategy, with judicious use of allopurinol for those patients in whom this preventive approach fails.
高尿酸血症和痛风性关节炎与肾移植受者使用环孢素有关。需要心脏或心肺移植的患者可能有更多痛风发病的风险因素,但此前在该人群中尚未有相关描述。我们在此分享6例心脏移植受者痛风性关节炎的临床经验。
在一年时间里,6例住院男性心脏移植患者因痛风性关节炎前来会诊。其中5例随后作为门诊患者接受痛风随访;第6例在6个月内死亡。治疗措施包括试用非甾体抗炎药(NSAIDs)、秋水仙碱、别嘌醇和关节内注射类固醇,以及尽量减少环孢素肾毒性的尝试。
3例患者在移植手术时痛风处于缓解期,另外3例在移植后2至45个月首次发生痛风。移植手术后,既有痛风和新发痛风似乎都呈现出加速病程,在随访超过6个月的5例患者中,有4例慢性多关节疾病和痛风石发展异常迅速。血清尿酸峰值水平在11.0mg/dL至16.5mg/dL之间。NSAIDs导致4例患者出现可逆性肾功能不全。3例患者发生痛风相关感染,其中1例死亡。
尽管同时使用免疫抑制药物,心脏移植受者仍可能发生急性痛风性关节炎。环孢素及其伴随的高血压和肾毒性,似乎是这种情况下高尿酸血症的主要危险因素,导致痛风石和慢性多关节炎加速发展。患者的肾功能不全、感染倾向以及与移植相关药物的相互作用使治疗变得复杂。通过尽量减少环孢素肾毒性来预防高尿酸血症似乎是最佳管理策略,对于预防措施失败的患者谨慎使用别嘌醇。