Increasing prevalence of gout and hyperuricemia over 10 years among older adults in a managed care population.

KL Wallace, AA Riedel, N Joseph-Ridge… - The Journal of …, 2004 - jrheum.org
KL Wallace, AA Riedel, N Joseph-Ridge, R Wortmann
The Journal of rheumatology, 2004jrheum.org
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether the prevalence of gout and/or clinically significant
hyperuricemia increased in a managed care population over 10 years. METHODS: The
study was a descriptive analysis utilizing an administrative claims database to ascertain 10-
year trends in prevalence of gout and/or hyperuricemia. Prevalence rates were calculated
cross-sectionally for each year (1990-99) and expressed/compared as rates per 1000
enrollees. RESULTS: The prevalence of gout and/or hyperuricemia in the overall population …
OBJECTIVE
To determine whether the prevalence of gout and/or clinically significant hyperuricemia increased in a managed care population over 10 years.
METHODS
The study was a descriptive analysis utilizing an administrative claims database to ascertain 10-year trends in prevalence of gout and/or hyperuricemia. Prevalence rates were calculated cross-sectionally for each year (1990-99) and expressed/compared as rates per 1000 enrollees.
RESULTS
The prevalence of gout and/or hyperuricemia in the overall population increased by about 2 cases per 1000 enrollees over 10 years. In the > 75 year age group, rates increased from 21 per 1000 persons in 1990 to 41 per 1000 in 1999. In the 65-74 year age group, prevalence increased from between 21 and 24 per 1000 persons in the years 1990-92 to over 31 per 1000 during the years 1997-99. Prevalence rates in younger age groups (< 65 years) stayed consistently low during the years under study. There were sex differences in most age groups, with men having the greater burden of disease at every time point.
CONCLUSION
Prevalence of gout and/or hyperuricemia in the overall study population increased during the 10-year period. When stratified by age, there were increases in prevalence among groups over age 65 in both sexes. Although gout prevalence increased in both sexes over the 10-year period, men still had most of the burden of disease. In ages younger than 65, men had 4 times higher prevalence than women (4:1 ratio), but in the older age groups (> 65), the gender gap narrowed to 1 woman to every 3 men with gout and/or hyperuricemia (3:1 ratio).
jrheum.org