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.

Episoder(386)

119. Aimovig or Erenumab Prescription Description

119. Aimovig or Erenumab Prescription Description

A listener wrote in with a question about a drug, this is my response. Let me know your thoughts? Would you prescribe this drug? Andrewbuelt@gmail.comhttps://www.nejm.org/doi/pdf/10.1056/NEJMoa1705848

13 Mar 202024min

118. Choosing Wisely, Statins for Stroke, and Physical Therapy first

118. Choosing Wisely, Statins for Stroke, and Physical Therapy first

There was a paper to start the year that got a lot of hype saying that just maybe we should target an LDL but that is not what the study actually showed and I will tell you why I think it is wrong.

8 Mar 202022min

117. The Benefits on Healthy lifestyle and Nutrition

117. The Benefits on Healthy lifestyle and Nutrition

https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamainternalmedicine/fullarticle/2757311?widget=personalizedcontent&previousarticle=2757307 Prior authorization requirements increased from 8% to approximately 24% of...

1 Mar 202034min

116. Conflicts of Vaccine, Understanding Sunscreen, and UPTODATE

116. Conflicts of Vaccine, Understanding Sunscreen, and UPTODATE

https://annals.org/aim/fullarticle/2760034/disclosure-form-work-submitted-medical-journals-proposal-from-international-committee. disclose everything for the papers that you keep..or writePatient comp...

25 Feb 202022min

115. Part 3 of the Top Articles of 2019

115. Part 3 of the Top Articles of 2019

Try not to read these all at once!!https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30715088 https://www.bmj.com/content/365/bmj.l2006 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30359476 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pub...

11 Feb 202022min

114. Top Articles of 2019 Part 2

114. Top Articles of 2019 Part 2

No summary YET! I promise it is coming, but here are a few more articles I think were pretty impressive from 2019.

4 Feb 202019min

113. Top articles of 2019 part 1

113. Top articles of 2019 part 1

It is that time of year again-- Top articles of 2019 part 1. This is my opinion, but I think it is a pretty good opinion.

24 Jan 202022min

112. Grade B, COPD, and Facebook for HIV

112. Grade B, COPD, and Facebook for HIV

https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/2751726 uspstf now grade B for asymptomatic urine in preggohttps://pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/144/6/e20192739kids do shoot their eye out!h...

17 Jan 202026min

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