Episode 424: 431. Gout should we treat to a number? Is Co-testing needed?

Episode 424: 431. Gout should we treat to a number? Is Co-testing needed?

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S2665991326000342?via%3Dihub

lancet rheumatology

A treat-to-target strategy versus symptom-driven management of gout in the Netherlands (GO TEST Overture): a multicentre, open-label, pragmatic, superiority, randomised controlled trial

The question on the table: Is chasing a serum urate level below six milligrams per deciliter worth the effort? Or are we just torturing our patients with more lab draws and dose titrations than they actually need?

What’s the Real Takeaway?

So — is it worth chasing six? Probably yes, but let's keep expectations realistic.

Think of it like aiming for LDL targets in dyslipidemia — specific numbers keep us intentional,

The bottom line: when your gout patient agrees to start urate-lowering therapy, don’t expect miracles overnight. Lower urate just tilts the odds for fewer flares — it doesn’t guarantee smooth sailing for every patient.


https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle/2846208

HPV, Cytology, and Cotest Cervical Cancer Screening and the Risk of Precancer

Let’s start with the basics. For years the Pap test, or cytology, has been the main tool for catching early changes on the cervix. More recently, we’ve added tests that look directly for HPV, the virus that actually causes most cervical cancers. Some places now do both at the same time, called “cotesting.” It sounds like more must be better, right?

A big study out of British Columbia followed over eight thousand women for up to ten years after they had both tests done at the same visit. The researchers wanted to know: if your HPV test is negative, does adding that extra Pap result actually help keep you safer in the long run?

Here’s what they found. If a woman’s HPV test was positive and her Pap looked abnormal, her chance of developing a significant precancer over time was pretty high, more than 40%. If the HPV test was positive but the Pap looked normal, the risk was lower, but still real—over 20%. Those are the folks we definitely want to follow closely.

But once the HPV test was negative, the story changed. Whether the Pap looked normal or a bit off, the risk of serious precancer over the following years stayed very low—well under 5%, and for most women under 1%. In fact, women who were HPV‑negative had almost the same low risk as women whose HPV and Pap were both negative, but adding that Pap test made screening more complicated and more expensive for very little extra benefit.

So what does this mean in plain language? If your HPV test is negative, you’re in a very low‑risk group for cervical precancer for many years, even if your Pap result isn’t perfectly pristine. Doing both tests on everyone, every time, doesn’t buy much extra safety, but it does add cost and can lead to more follow‑up procedures that many women don’t actually need.

Jaksot(386)

Episode 423: 430. Hormone Replacement Therapy and the Black Box Warning

Episode 423: 430. Hormone Replacement Therapy and the Black Box Warning

Let’s rewind to the early 2000s. Flip phones were cool, low-rise jeans were a crime, and the Women’s Health Initiative—WHI—dropped what became the medical equivalent of a headline: “Hormone Therapy In...

24 Maalis 12min

Episode 422: 429. Rivaroxaban vs Apixaban = The Battle of the Blood Thinners!

Episode 422: 429. Rivaroxaban vs Apixaban = The Battle of the Blood Thinners!

— rivaroxaban versus apixaban.Yes, folks, this is The Battle of the Blood Thinners!And spoiler alert — one of them came out looking like the overachiever in a safety class... while the other probably ...

20 Maalis 9min

Episode 421: 428. Asthma and Stroke --- A breathless combination

Episode 421: 428. Asthma and Stroke --- A breathless combination

Minocycline in Acute Ischemic Stroke (EMPHASIS trial)A multicenter, double-blind RCT in China studied 1,724 patients with acute ischemic stroke treated within 72 hours of onset. Patients received eith...

13 Maalis 16min

Episode 420: 427. Kawasaki disease-no, not the motorcycle company

Episode 420: 427. Kawasaki disease-no, not the motorcycle company

Today, we're talking about Kawasaki disease-no, not the motorcycle company, though sometimes treating it does feel like trying to ride one at full speed through uncertainty.For decades, high-dose aspi...

11 Maalis 7min

Episode 419: 426. Go Big or Go Partial? The Knee Replacement Showdown

Episode 419: 426. Go Big or Go Partial? The Knee Replacement Showdown

Setting the stagePicture this: your knee is like a three-room apartment. You've got a medial room, a lateral room, and a patellofemoral room. In isolated anteromedial osteoarthritis, just one room is ...

10 Maalis 11min

Episode 418: 425. Triptan initiation and cerebrovascular events

Episode 418: 425. Triptan initiation and cerebrovascular events

Kalapura C, et al. Triptan initiation and cerebrovascular events in patients with migraine: A nationwide cohort study. J Am Heart Assoc 2026 Feb 17; 15:e043409. DOI: 10.1161/JAHA.125.043409.  Today, w...

6 Maalis 6min

Episode 417: 424. GLP1 and NAION

Episode 417: 424. GLP1 and NAION

Li H-Y, et al. GLP-1 receptor agonists and risk of optic nerve or vision-threatening events in patients with type 2 diabetes or cardiometabolic diseases: A meta-analysis of randomized controlled trial...

5 Maalis 8min

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