4.4 Article

Acute joint swelling in psoriatic arthritis: Flare or psout-A 10-year-monocentric study on synovial fluid

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
Volume 247, Issue 18, Pages 1650-1656

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/15353702221110666

Keywords

Synovial fluid; psoriatic arthritis; psout; hyperuricemia; crystals; acute joint swelling

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The study aims to describe acute joint swelling in patients with psoriatic arthritis (PsA) through synovial fluid analysis, with a focus on the presence of pathogenic crystals, and determine whether it is a flare or an acute episode of gout (psout). Results indicate that although the risk of gout is higher among PsA patients, the presence of urate crystals is rare and hyperuricemia does not seem to modify synovial fluid features in PsA patients.
Psoriatic arthritis (PsA) is a multifaceted inflammatory disease associated with psoriasis that can affect peripheral joints, entheses, and the axial skeleton with a variable clinical course. Acute episodes of joint swelling in PsA patients can have different causes and require specific treatments. We aimed to describe the acute joint swelling in PsA patients via synovial fluid (SF) analyses, assessing in particular the presence of pathogenic crystals, to determine whether it is a flare or an acute episode of gout (psout) during the course of the disease. This retrospective study was based on the results of SF analysis of samples collected from unselected adult PsA patients referred to our clinic for acute joint swelling. Demographic characteristics, disease involvement, laboratory findings on SF, and treatment options were recorded and reviewed. Among 5,478 SF samples analyzed in a 10-year time span, 213 complete SF records from PsA patients were evaluated. Overall, after adjustment for the degree of synovial inflammation, significant differences were observed in term of sex (p = 0.0017) and ongoing therapy (p = 0.0246). Non-inflammatory SFs, indeed, were mainly described for female PsA patients under therapy. Regarding serum uric acid levels, there were 19/213 (8.9%) PsA with hyperuricemia (HU), who were older, mostly male, patients with mild articular involvement and rare pathogenic crystals in their SF. Although it is known that the risk of gout is higher among patients with PsA (psout), monosodium urate crystals were reported only in 5/213 SFs (2.4%) of our cohort and in 2/19 SFs (10.5%) of HU PsA patients. Moreover, hyperuricemia seems not to modify the SF features in PsA patients. This study results seem to suggest that the convergence of gout and PsA, involving the role of urate crystals, is a more intricate relationship, which needs further insights to be unraveled.

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