Survey Definitions of Gout for Epidemiologic Studies: Comparison With Crystal Identification as the Gold Standard

© 2016, American College of Rheumatology Objective: To identify the best-performing survey definition of gout from items commonly available in epidemiologic studies. Methods: Survey definitions of gout were identified from 34 epidemiologic studies contributing to the Global Urate Genetics Consortium...

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Main Authors: Nicola Dalbeth, H. Ralph Schumacher, Jaap Fransen, Tuhina Neogi, Tim L. Jansen, Melanie Brown, Worawit Louthrenoo, Janitzia Vazquez-Mellado, Maxim Eliseev, Geraldine McCarthy, Lisa K. Stamp, Fernando Perez-Ruiz, Francisca Sivera, Hang Korng Ea, Martijn Gerritsen, Carlo A. Scire, Lorenzo Cavagna, Chingtsai Lin, Yin Yi Chou, Anne Kathrin Tausche, Geraldo da Rocha Castelar-Pinheiro, Matthijs Janssen, Jiunn Horng Chen, Marco A. Cimmino, Till Uhlig, William J. Taylor
Format: Journal
Published: 2018
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spelling th-cmuir.6653943832-560082018-09-05T03:07:41Z Survey Definitions of Gout for Epidemiologic Studies: Comparison With Crystal Identification as the Gold Standard Nicola Dalbeth H. Ralph Schumacher Jaap Fransen Tuhina Neogi Tim L. Jansen Melanie Brown Worawit Louthrenoo Janitzia Vazquez-Mellado Maxim Eliseev Geraldine McCarthy Lisa K. Stamp Fernando Perez-Ruiz Francisca Sivera Hang Korng Ea Martijn Gerritsen Carlo A. Scire Lorenzo Cavagna Chingtsai Lin Yin Yi Chou Anne Kathrin Tausche Geraldo da Rocha Castelar-Pinheiro Matthijs Janssen Jiunn Horng Chen Marco A. Cimmino Till Uhlig William J. Taylor Medicine © 2016, American College of Rheumatology Objective: To identify the best-performing survey definition of gout from items commonly available in epidemiologic studies. Methods: Survey definitions of gout were identified from 34 epidemiologic studies contributing to the Global Urate Genetics Consortium (GUGC) genome-wide association study. Data from the Study for Updated Gout Classification Criteria (SUGAR) were randomly divided into development and test data sets. A data-driven case definition was formed using logistic regression in the development data set. This definition, along with definitions used in GUGC studies and the 2015 American College of Rheumatology (ACR)/European League Against Rheumatism (EULAR) gout classification criteria were applied to the test data set, using monosodium urate crystal identification as the gold standard. Results: For all tested GUGC definitions, the simple definition of “self-report of gout or urate-lowering therapy use” had the best test performance characteristics (sensitivity 82%, specificity 72%). The simple definition had similar performance to a SUGAR data-driven case definition with 5 weighted items: self-report, self-report of doctor diagnosis, colchicine use, urate-lowering therapy use, and hyperuricemia (sensitivity 87%, specificity 70%). Both of these definitions performed better than the 1977 American Rheumatism Association survey criteria (sensitivity 82%, specificity 67%). Of all tested definitions, the 2015 ACR/EULAR criteria had the best performance (sensitivity 92%, specificity 89%). Conclusion: A simple definition of “self-report of gout or urate-lowering therapy use” has the best test performance characteristics of existing definitions that use routinely available data. A more complex combination of features is more sensitive, but still lacks good specificity. If a more accurate case definition is required for a particular study, the 2015 ACR/EULAR gout classification criteria should be considered. 2018-09-05T03:07:41Z 2018-09-05T03:07:41Z 2016-12-01 Journal 21514658 2151464X 2-s2.0-84997078109 10.1002/acr.22896 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84997078109&origin=inward http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/56008
institution Chiang Mai University
building Chiang Mai University Library
country Thailand
collection CMU Intellectual Repository
topic Medicine
spellingShingle Medicine
Nicola Dalbeth
H. Ralph Schumacher
Jaap Fransen
Tuhina Neogi
Tim L. Jansen
Melanie Brown
Worawit Louthrenoo
Janitzia Vazquez-Mellado
Maxim Eliseev
Geraldine McCarthy
Lisa K. Stamp
Fernando Perez-Ruiz
Francisca Sivera
Hang Korng Ea
Martijn Gerritsen
Carlo A. Scire
Lorenzo Cavagna
Chingtsai Lin
Yin Yi Chou
Anne Kathrin Tausche
Geraldo da Rocha Castelar-Pinheiro
Matthijs Janssen
Jiunn Horng Chen
Marco A. Cimmino
Till Uhlig
William J. Taylor
Survey Definitions of Gout for Epidemiologic Studies: Comparison With Crystal Identification as the Gold Standard
description © 2016, American College of Rheumatology Objective: To identify the best-performing survey definition of gout from items commonly available in epidemiologic studies. Methods: Survey definitions of gout were identified from 34 epidemiologic studies contributing to the Global Urate Genetics Consortium (GUGC) genome-wide association study. Data from the Study for Updated Gout Classification Criteria (SUGAR) were randomly divided into development and test data sets. A data-driven case definition was formed using logistic regression in the development data set. This definition, along with definitions used in GUGC studies and the 2015 American College of Rheumatology (ACR)/European League Against Rheumatism (EULAR) gout classification criteria were applied to the test data set, using monosodium urate crystal identification as the gold standard. Results: For all tested GUGC definitions, the simple definition of “self-report of gout or urate-lowering therapy use” had the best test performance characteristics (sensitivity 82%, specificity 72%). The simple definition had similar performance to a SUGAR data-driven case definition with 5 weighted items: self-report, self-report of doctor diagnosis, colchicine use, urate-lowering therapy use, and hyperuricemia (sensitivity 87%, specificity 70%). Both of these definitions performed better than the 1977 American Rheumatism Association survey criteria (sensitivity 82%, specificity 67%). Of all tested definitions, the 2015 ACR/EULAR criteria had the best performance (sensitivity 92%, specificity 89%). Conclusion: A simple definition of “self-report of gout or urate-lowering therapy use” has the best test performance characteristics of existing definitions that use routinely available data. A more complex combination of features is more sensitive, but still lacks good specificity. If a more accurate case definition is required for a particular study, the 2015 ACR/EULAR gout classification criteria should be considered.
format Journal
author Nicola Dalbeth
H. Ralph Schumacher
Jaap Fransen
Tuhina Neogi
Tim L. Jansen
Melanie Brown
Worawit Louthrenoo
Janitzia Vazquez-Mellado
Maxim Eliseev
Geraldine McCarthy
Lisa K. Stamp
Fernando Perez-Ruiz
Francisca Sivera
Hang Korng Ea
Martijn Gerritsen
Carlo A. Scire
Lorenzo Cavagna
Chingtsai Lin
Yin Yi Chou
Anne Kathrin Tausche
Geraldo da Rocha Castelar-Pinheiro
Matthijs Janssen
Jiunn Horng Chen
Marco A. Cimmino
Till Uhlig
William J. Taylor
author_facet Nicola Dalbeth
H. Ralph Schumacher
Jaap Fransen
Tuhina Neogi
Tim L. Jansen
Melanie Brown
Worawit Louthrenoo
Janitzia Vazquez-Mellado
Maxim Eliseev
Geraldine McCarthy
Lisa K. Stamp
Fernando Perez-Ruiz
Francisca Sivera
Hang Korng Ea
Martijn Gerritsen
Carlo A. Scire
Lorenzo Cavagna
Chingtsai Lin
Yin Yi Chou
Anne Kathrin Tausche
Geraldo da Rocha Castelar-Pinheiro
Matthijs Janssen
Jiunn Horng Chen
Marco A. Cimmino
Till Uhlig
William J. Taylor
author_sort Nicola Dalbeth
title Survey Definitions of Gout for Epidemiologic Studies: Comparison With Crystal Identification as the Gold Standard
title_short Survey Definitions of Gout for Epidemiologic Studies: Comparison With Crystal Identification as the Gold Standard
title_full Survey Definitions of Gout for Epidemiologic Studies: Comparison With Crystal Identification as the Gold Standard
title_fullStr Survey Definitions of Gout for Epidemiologic Studies: Comparison With Crystal Identification as the Gold Standard
title_full_unstemmed Survey Definitions of Gout for Epidemiologic Studies: Comparison With Crystal Identification as the Gold Standard
title_sort survey definitions of gout for epidemiologic studies: comparison with crystal identification as the gold standard
publishDate 2018
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84997078109&origin=inward
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/56008
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