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Rheumatology 2009 48(2):188-194; doi:10.1093/rheumatology/ken457
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© The Author 2009. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Society for Rheumatology. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Febuxostat in the treatment of gout: 5-yr findings of the FOCUS efficacy and safety study

H. R. Schumacher, Jr1, M. A. Becker2, E. Lloyd3, P. A. MacDonald3 and C. Lademacher3

1University of Pennsylvania and VA Medical Center, Philadelphia, PA, 2University of Chicago, Pritzker School of Medicine, Chicago and 3Takeda Global Research and Development Center, Deerfield, IL, USA.

Correspondence to: H. R. Schumacher Jr, VA Medical Center, 151K, University and Woodland Avenues, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA. E-mail: schumacr{at}mail.med.upenn.edu


   Abstract

Objectives. This 5-yr study assessed urate-lowering and clinical efficacy and safety of long-term febuxostat therapy in subjects with gout. The primary efficacy end-point was reduction to and maintenance of serum urate (sUA) levels <6.0 mg/dl.

Methods. Subjects who completed a previous 28-day study were entered into an open-label extension study and initially received febuxostat 80 mg daily. Between Weeks 4 and 24, dosing could be adjusted to febuxostat 40 or 120 mg. All subjects received gout flare prophylaxis during the first 4 weeks. Gout flares were recorded and treated throughout the study, and sUA, baseline tophi and safety were monitored.

Results. Among 116 subjects initially enrolled, dose adjustments were made for 44 (38%) subjects. As a result, 8 subjects received febuxostat 40 mg, 79 received 80 mg, and 29 received 120 mg daily maintenance dose. At 5 yrs, 93% (54/58) of the remaining subjects had sUA <6.0 mg/dl. Fifty-eight subjects (50%) discontinued prematurely; 38 did so in the first year. Thirteen subjects withdrew due to an adverse event. Sustained reduction of sUA was associated with nearly complete elimination of gout flares. In 26 subjects with a tophus at baseline, resolution was achieved in 69% (18/26) by last visit on study drug at any point during the study (Final Visit). There were no deaths reported during the study.

Conclusions. Long-term treatment with febuxostat resulted in durable maintenance of sUA <6.0 mg/dl for most subjects. There was nearly complete abolition of gout flares in patients completing the study. Baseline tophi resolved in a majority of subjects.

KEY WORDS: Febuxostat, Gout, Hyperuricaemia, Allopurinol


Present address: C. Lademacher, Astellas Pharma US, Deerfield, IL, USA

Submitted 9 June 2008; revised version accepted 18 November 2008.
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