COVID‐19 Vaccination and Gout Flare Risk in Patients With Infrequent or Frequent Flares: A Prospective Cohort Study

Author:

He Yuwei1ORCID,Xue Xiaomei2ORCID,Dalbeth Nicola3ORCID,Terkeltaub Robert4ORCID,Chen Ying5,Yan Fei2ORCID,Pang Lei2,Li Xinde5,Yuan Xuan6ORCID,Cheng Xiaoyu2,Li Changgui1ORCID,Sun Mingshu5

Affiliation:

1. The Affiliated Hospital of Qingdao University, Shandong Provincial Clinical Research Center for Immune Diseases and Gout, and Qingdao University Qingdao China

2. The Affiliated Hospital of Qingdao University Qingdao China

3. University of Auckland Auckland New Zealand

4. VA San Diego Medical Center, San Diego, and University of California San Diego La Jolla California

5. The Affiliated Hospital of Qingdao University and Shandong Provincial Clinical Research Center for Immune Diseases and Gout Qingdao China

6. Qingdao University Qingdao China

Abstract

ObjectiveTo assess post‐COVID‐19 vaccination gout flare risk with differing baseline flare burden.MethodsWe prospectively studied gout patients with infrequent or frequent flares, defined as ≤1 flare/year or ≥2 flares/year, respectively. COVID‐19 vaccine‐naive patients managed with urate‐lowering therapy between February and June 2021 were included and voluntarily decided on vaccination. Participants were followed for 12 weeks after enrollment or first vaccine dose. Gout flares and risk factors were compared between groups.ResultsOf 530 participants, 308 (58.1%) had infrequent flares and 222 (41.9%) had frequent flares at baseline, with 248 (142 infrequent and 106 frequent) receiving two‐dose COVID‐19 vaccination. Vaccination increased cumulative flare incidence at 12 weeks in the infrequent but not the frequent flare group (26.1% vs 10.8%, P = 0.001, compared with 60.4% vs 65.5%, P = 0.428). Flare incidence in the final 4 weeks of observation decreased significantly only in the vaccinated infrequent flare group (4.3% vs 12.0%, P = 0.017). Multivariable analyses showed that vaccination (odds ratio [OR] 2.82, 95% confidence interval [95% CI] 1.50–5.30, P = 0.001), flare in the preceding year (OR 1.95, 95% CI 1.03–3.71, P = 0.04), and body mass index (OR 1.09, 95% CI 1.01–1.19, P = 0.03) were independently associated with increased flare risk in the infrequent flare group. Baseline serum urate (mg/dl) was an independent risk factor in the frequent flare group (OR 1.23, 95% CI 1.05–1.45, P = 0.012).ConclusionCOVID‐19 vaccination was associated with increased early gout flares only in patients with previously infrequent flares. image

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Rheumatology

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