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Randomised double blind trial of etoricoxib and indometacin in treatment of acute gouty arthritis

BMJ 2002; 324 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.324.7352.1488 (Published 22 June 2002) Cite this as: BMJ 2002;324:1488
  1. H Ralph Schumacher Jr, professor of medicinea,
  2. Judith A Boice (judith_boice{at}merck.com), senior medical program coordinatorb,
  3. David I Daikh, assistant professor of medicined,
  4. Saurabh Mukhopadhyay, senior biometricianc,
  5. Kerstin Malmstrom, directorb,
  6. Jennifer Ng, associate directorc,
  7. Guillermo A Tate, directore,
  8. Javier Molina, honorary professor of medicinef
  1. a Division of Rheumatology, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine and Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA
  2. b Department of Clinical Immunology and Analgesia, Merck Research Laboratories, Rahway, NJ 07065, USA
  3. c Department of Clinical Biostatistics and Research Data Systems, Merck Research Laboratories
  4. d Division of Rheumatology, University of California, San Francisco and Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, San Francisco, CA 94121, USA
  5. e Centro de Osteopatias, Reumatologia e Investigaciones Clinicas, 1012 Buenos Aires, Argentina
  6. f Department of Internal Medicine, Antioquia University, Calle 64 Carrera 51 D, Medellin-Colombia, 1226
  1. Correspondence to: J A Boice
  • Accepted 11 April 2002

Abstract

Objective: To assess the safety and efficacy of etoricoxib, a selective cyclo-oxygenase-2 inhibitor, in comparison with indometacin in the treatment of acute gouty arthritis.

Design: Randomised, double blind, active comparator controlled trial.

Setting: 43 outpatient study centres in 11 countries.

Participants: 142 men and eight women (75 patients per treatment group) aged 18 years or over presenting with clinically diagnosed acute gout within 48 hours of onset.

Interventions: Etoricoxib 120 mg administered orally once daily versus indometacin 50 mg administered orally three times daily, both for 8 days

Main outcome measures: Patients' assessment of pain in the study joint over days 2 to 5 (primary end point); investigators' and patients' global assessments of response to treatment and tenderness of the study joint (key secondary end points).

Results: Etoricoxib showed efficacy comparable to indometacin. Patients' assessment of pain in the study joint (0-4 point Likert scale, “no pain” to “extreme pain”) over days 2 to 5 showed a least squares mean change from baseline of −1.72 (95% confidence interval −1.90 to −1.55) for etoricoxib and −1.83 (−2.01 to −1.65) for indometacin. The difference between treatment groups met prespecified comparability criteria. All other efficacy end points, including those reflecting reduction in inflammation and analgesia, provided corroborative evidence of comparable efficacy. Significant pain relief was evident at the first measurement, 4 hours after the first dose of treatment. Prespecified safety analyses revealed that drug related adverse experiences occurred significantly less frequently with etoricoxib (22.7%) than with indometacin (46.7%) (P=0.003), although overall adverse experience rates were similar between the two treatment groups.

Conclusion: Etoricoxib 120 mg once daily provides rapid and effective treatment for acute gouty arthritis comparable to indometacin 50 mg three times daily. Etoricoxib was generally safe and well tolerated in this study.

What is already known on this topic

Acute gouty arthritis is an extremely painful inflammatory arthritis resulting from deposition of monosodium urate in the affected joint space

The most common treatment is a non-selective non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug, with indometacin being the standard treatment

Current treatment modalities are based on limited, small studies

What this study adds

Etoricoxib, a cyclo-oxygenase-2 selective inhibitor, has comparable efficacy to indometacin in the treatment of acute gouty arthritis

Etoricoxib provides rapid relief of pain and effectively treats the inflammation of acute gout; it is an effective treatment alternative to indometacin

Introduction

Gout is the most common form of inflammatory joint disease in men over the age of 40.1 Acute gout is an intense, extremely painful, inflammatory arthritis with a rapidly escalating inflammatory response resulting from formation of monosodium urate crystals in the affected joint space. Although pain is the primary symptom of acute gout, an effective treatment must target both the pain and the underlying inflammation.

The drugs most often prescribed for acute gout are the non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, of which indometacin is the standard treatment. 2 3 Although indometacin is widely used, its efficacy is based on few studies,47 and it is associated with significant side effects in the gastrointestinal tract and central nervous system. 8 9 Non-selective non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, including indometacin, inhibit two closely related enzymes—cyclo-oxygenase-1 and cyclo-oxygenase-2. Cyclo-oxygenase-1 is broadly and constitutively expressed, whereas cyclo-oxygenase-2 is an inducible enzyme involved in inflammatory processes. Cyclo-oxygenase-2 selective inhibitors, such as rofecoxib and celecoxib, have been shown to be as effective as non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs in the treatment of osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, and acute pain.1014 However, the efficacy of selective cyclo-oxygenase-2 inhibitors in the treatment of acute inflammatory conditions such as acute gout has not been assessed.

Unlike other inflammatory conditions, such as those caused by tissue injury or aberrant immune responses, the inflammatory stimulus for acute gout is monosodium urate crystals. Although preclinical data have shown that cyclo-oxygenase-2 protein is induced in pro-inflammatory cells exposed to monosodium urate crystals,15 the rapid onset of a gout attack may indicate the involvement of the early response phase of inflammation, potentially involving cyclo-oxygenase-1. Analysis of synovial fluid from patients with acute gout supports the potential role of cyclo-oxygenase-1.16 The efficacy of a cyclo-oxygenase-2 selective inhibitor in acute gout is therefore speculative in the absence of clinical data.

To determine whether selectively inhibiting cyclo-oxygenase-2 in a rapid and sustained manner can effectively treat the pain and inflammation of acute gouty arthritis, we compared the efficacy of etoricoxib with that of indometacin.

Methods

Study population

Eligible patients were aged 18 years or over with acute gout (onset within 48 hours) associated with moderate, severe, or extreme pain and meeting the American Rheumatology Association diagnostic criteria for acute gout (see box on bmj.com). 17 18 Additional criteria included baseline evaluations showing a sum score of ≥5 for pain (0-4 point scale), tenderness (0-3 point scale), and swelling (0-3 point scale) and a complete blood count, blood chemistry, and urinalysis within one year before randomisation without clinically significant abnormalities or a normal complete blood count and serum creatinine obtained before dosing.

We excluded patients if they had acute polyarticular gout involving more than four joints; a concurrent medical or arthritic disease that could confound or interfere with the efficacy evaluation; or an unstable medical condition, including any history contraindicating the use of indometacin, a history of cancer during the previous five years, or a history of cerebrovascular events, myocardial infarction, or coronary bypass in the previous year. We also excluded patients taking corticosteroids within one month before randomisation or taking anticoagulants, ticlopidine, clopidogrel, or digoxin. We permitted patients to continue (without dose change) low dose aspirin (≤325 mg daily), allopurinol if taken for at least two weeks before randomisation, and colchicine (≤1.2 mg daily) if taken at a stable dose for more than 30 days before randomisation. We did not allow non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs within 48 hours before baseline assessments or analgesics, including aspirin, within six hours before baseline assessments and for the duration of the trial.

Study design

This was a randomised, double blind (the investigators and sponsor were blinded throughout the study), active comparator controlled study. The institutional review board or ethics review committee at each centre approved the protocol, and all patients gave written informed consent before participation. Patients were screened and, if eligible, randomised immediately (day 1), according to a computer generated allocation schedule provided by the sponsor, to receive oral administration of etoricoxib 120 mg once daily or indometacin 50 mg three times daily. Patients took one tablet of etoricoxib or placebo from bottle A once daily in the morning and one capsule of indometacin or placebo from bottle B three times daily (morning, afternoon, and evening). The treatment allocation was stratified for monoarticular or polyarticular acute gout. All patients completed pain assessments daily and returned to the clinic on days 2, 5, and 8 for assessment by the investigator; they also returned 14 days after the last dose for a post-study visit.

Assessment of efficacy

Efficacy end points included patients' assessment of pain in the study joint (primary end point) and investigators' assessments of tenderness, swelling, and erythema. We also evaluated patients' and investigators' global assessments of response to treatment.

The patients assessed pain in the study joint (0-4 point scale: “none,” “mild,” “moderate,” “severe,” “extreme”) at baseline, four hours after the initial dose on day 1, and approximately four hours after the first daily dose on days 2 to 8. Investigators assessed tenderness of the study joint on the basis of palpation or passive motion (0-3 point scale: “no pain” to “patient states there is pain, winces, and withdraws”), swelling (0-3 point scale: “none” to “bulging beyond joint margins”), and erythema (present or absent) at baseline and at clinic visits. Patients' (0-4 point scale: “excellent” to “poor”) and investigators' (0-4 point scale: “excellent” to “none”) global assessments of response to treatment were collected at clinic visits. We also assessed the proportion of patients discontinuing treatment owing to lack of efficacy.

Assessment of safety and tolerability

Investigators performed physical examinations, assessed vital signs, and took samples for laboratory tests (complete blood count, blood chemistry, and urinalysis) at baseline and at the post-study visit. They also collected samples for laboratory tests on day 8. They assessed vital signs and noted adverse experiences at all visits. Investigators evaluated all adverse experiences for intensity, seriousness, and relation to study drug while blinded to the treatment allocation.

Statistical analysis

We hypothesised that etoricoxib would show clinical efficacy comparable to indometacin as evaluated by patients' assessment of pain in the study joint (mean change from baseline over days 2 to 5 (primary end point) and over days 2 to 8 (secondary end point)). As prespecified in the data analysis plan, etoricoxib would be declared comparable to indometacin if the 95% confidence interval for the between treatment difference fell within ±0.5 Likert units; these bounds were based on a consensus development (delphi) exercise in which ±0.5 was shown to be the minimum clinically important difference in osteoarthritis.19 The prespecified criteria for verifying the efficacy of indometacin required that the mean change from baseline in the indometacin group should be at least −1.46 Likert units. This criterion was based on a 95% confidence interval for 60% of the predicted treatment effect (−2.02 to −1.46), calculated using data from a study of indometacin versus ketoprofen4 and a non-treatment, observational study.20

On the basis of a standard deviation of 0.71 observed in a study of postorthopaedic surgical pain with rofecoxib,21 n=62 patients per group would have 95% power to show comparable efficacy if the true mean difference between etoricoxib and indometacin was zero. We analysed continuous efficacy variables by using a covariance model including factors for treatment, stratum, and baseline response. We obtained least squares means and associated 95% confidence intervals to estimate and compare between treatment responses. We computed average responses from observed data and used the last value carried forward method for longitudinal graphs. We used Fisher's exact test and the Wilson's score method to compare variables analysed as proportions, including analysis of prespecified adverse experiences.22 We based analyses on an intention to treat approach (all patients with a baseline and at least one on-treatment measurement).

Results

Characteristics of the patients

Forty three study centres (hospital clinics, urgent care centres, and office practices) in 11 countries participated. A total of 31 centres enrolled 150 patients (75 in each group) between June and December 2000. Figure A on bmj.com shows a schematic representation of patient accounting throughout the study. Baseline characteristics (table A on bmj.com) and compliance rates were generally similar in both groups (around 91%).

Efficacy

Etoricoxib and indometacin showed comparable efficacy in the treatment of acute gouty arthritis as assessed by all efficacy end points over the first four days (days 2 to 5) and over the entire treatment period (days 2 to 8) (fig 1). Furthermore, indometacin showed efficacy consistent with the predefined treatment effect (−1.83; 95% confidence interval −2.01 to −1.65).

Primary end point

The mean (SE) baseline values for patients' assessment of pain in the study joint (primary end point) were 2.88 (0.08) units for etoricoxib and 2.99 (0.07) units for indometacin. Mean changes from baseline at each time point (fig 1) reveal that both treatment groups experienced comparable pain relief over the entire treatment period. The least squares mean difference between etoricoxib and indometacin for change in pain in the study joint from baseline was 0.11 (95% confidence interval −0.14 to 0.35) over days 2 to 5 and 0.09 (−0.14 to 0.33) over days 2 to 8. Thus for both time periods the difference between treatments was within the prespecified boundaries for comparability. On day 1, four hours after the initial dose, patients in both groups experienced significant pain relief (fig 1). The between group treatment effect was similar—least squares mean difference between the two treatment groups of −0.03 (−0.27 to 0.21). Improvements on days 2 and 3 were also robust and comparable between treatment groups—least squares mean change from baseline of −1.45 and −1.52 (day 2) and −1.66 and −1.76 (day 3) for etoricoxib and indometacin. The mean change from baseline criterion of −1.46 Likert units for indometacin, although not prespecified for these time periods, was also met.

Analysis of the primary end point included 72/75 patients in the etoricoxib group and 71/75 patients in the indometacin group. Seven patients were not included in this analysis owing to lack of any pain assessments from days 2 to 5.

Fig 1.
Fig 1.

Least squares mean and standard error for the change from baseline in patients' assessment of pain in the study joint (primary end point) over days 2 to 8 based on a 0-4 point Likert scale with 0=no pain, 1=mild pain, 2=moderate pain, 3=severe pain, and 4=extreme pain. The four hour time point indicates the assessment four hours after the initial dose of study drug on day 1, the day of the randomisation (R) visit (baseline)

Secondary end points

Etoricoxib showed efficacy similar to indometacin for all secondary efficacy end points (global assessments of response to treatment, joint tenderness and swelling (table 1), and discontinuation owing to lack of efficacy) and erythema. Five patients, three on etoricoxib and two on indometacin, discontinued owing to lack of efficacy (P>0.200). The proportion of patients with erythema in the study joint at baseline was high in both groups—89.3% for etoricoxib and 93.3% for indometacin—and decreased similarly over the entire treatment period: to 12.2% for etoricoxib and 13.7% for indometacin on day 8. The between treatment difference was similar at all measured time points (not shown).

Table 1.

Summary of secondary end points for days 2 to 8

View this table:

Onset of efficacy

Approximately 70% of patients experienced severe or extreme pain at baseline (see table A on bmj.com). We performed a retrospective analysis of the proportion of patients in each treatment group who reported mild pain or no pain at four hours after initial dosing and on days 2, 5, and 8 to provide an additional clinically meaningful measure of pain relief. Although the results of this analysis were similar in the two treatment groups (fig 2), we noted that 32% of the etoricoxib patients and 23% of the indometacin patients reported no pain or mild pain within four hours of dosing. Of the patients who reported severe or extreme pain at baseline, 22% in the etoricoxib group and 19% in the indometacin group had mild or no pain within four hours of dosing.

Fig 2.
Fig 2.

Proportion of clinically meaningful responses for patients' assessment of pain in the study joint for all patients in both treatment groups. Response=patients' assessment of pain is “mild” or “none;” R=randomisation visit; 4 hr=four hours after the initial dose on day 1

Consistency of efficacy across disease types

The reduction of pain in the study joint was consistent between monoarticular and polyarticular gout (P>0.200) and across subgroups defined by concomitant use of allopurinol, colchicine, or both.

Safety

Four serious adverse experiences were reported, all in the indometacin group: vomiting and headache (determined by the investigator to be drug related), a drug overdose, and a laryngeal neoplasm (determined not to be drug related). For all four prespecified categories of adverse experiences, etoricoxib was associated with a lower incidence than indometacin (table 2). Drug related adverse experiences showed a significant difference (P=0.003); the most disparate were dizziness (4 patients in the etoricoxib group and 15 in the indometacin group), headache (1 and 5), somnolence (1 and 4), and a variety of digestive adverse experiences (6 and 17). Five patients in the etoricoxib group and six in the indometacin group had one or more laboratory finding that was considered to be an adverse experience.

Table 2.

Analysis of prespecified adverse experiences. Values are numbers (percentages) of patients unless stated otherwise

View this table:

Discussion

Previous work has shown that cyclo-oxygenase-2 selective inhibitors provide efficacy similar to that of non-selective non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs in chronic inflammatory conditions and acute pain. However, the precise roles of cyclo-oxygenase-1 and cyclo-oxygenase-2 in acute inflammatory conditions such as acute gout have not been studied. In this study, we found that etoricoxib, which rapidly and selectively inhibits cyclo-oxygenase-2, had efficacy comparable to that of indometacin, the standard treatment for acute gout. We characterised the efficacy of etoricoxib on a wide variety of clinical manifestations of gout, including measurements that assessed both pain and inflammation, and found the efficacy of etoricoxib to be comparable to that of indometacin. Etoricoxib provided pain relief comparable to indometacin as early as four hours after the initial dose, the first time point assessed. The proportion of patients reporting mild or no pain at the initial time point showed the powerful and rapid analgesic and anti-inflammatory effect of both drugs. Our results—in combination with the established pharmacology of etoricoxib23—provide strong evidence in support of the hypothesis that selective inhibition of cyclo-oxygenase-2 alone is sufficient to treat the pain and inflammation of acute gout.

Few clinical trials have been performed in acute gout, and these trials enrolled small numbers of patients, so there is only suggestive evidence of the effectiveness of various treatments.24 This study, representing the largest controlled trial in acute gout reported to date, had a rigorous design. Patients satisfied established diagnostic criteria to ensure that they were having an attack of gout and were enrolled within 48 hours of the onset of the attack. The primary efficacy assessment was over the first four days. Given the self limiting nature of acute gout, this design ensured that the emphasis was on the initial days of an attack, the period least likely to be influenced by spontaneous improvements that could skew the efficacy analysis. The end points chosen had been used in previous studies on acute gout but, owing to the paucity of previous studies on acute gout, are only validated in studies of osteoarthritis and analgesia.

In this study etoricoxib and indometacin were generally safe and well tolerated. Even this large study was still too small to allow for a rigorous safety assessment. The data on drug related clinical adverse experiences show that etoricoxib may be better tolerated than indometacin, but additional studies are needed to enable any definitive conclusions on safety to be drawn.

In conclusion, these results showed that etoricoxib had comparable efficacy to indometacin, proving that selective, potent, and rapid inhibition of cyclo-oxygenase-2 is sufficient to treat acute gouty arthritis effectively. The demographics of the patients enrolled in this study were typical of patients with acute gout, and this, together with the diversity of the study sites, means that these results are likely to be applicable to patients with acute gout in general. The results of this study indicate that etoricoxib represents an effective treatment alternative to indometacin.

Acknowledgments

We thank Elliot Ehrich for invaluable contributions to the design of the study, Peter Merkel for helpful suggestions regarding the study design, and Ken Truitt for guidance during the course of the study. We also thank Briggs Morrison, Ned Braunstein, and Barry Gertz for their helpful comments and suggestions. The Acute Gout Study Group consisted of the following investigators: G Tate (Argentina); J Bentin (Belgium); R Fuller, D Souza (Brazil); J Basualdo (Chile); J Londono, J Molina (Colombia); V Thouas (Greece); J Orozco Alcala, J Vasquez-Mellado (Mexico); L McLean (New Zealand); J Antigua, S Navarra, E Osio-Salido (Philippines); A Lubbe, H Reuter (South Africa); W Blackburn, M Brown (AL, USA); D Arkfeld, D I Daikh, R Kaplan, A Kavanaugh, P Stein (CA, USA); G Gladstein (CT, USA); M Wooten (DE, USA); P Saxe, J Valeriano (FL, USA); C Agudelo, D Conn (GA, USA); T Schnitzer (IL, USA); D Neustadt (KY, USA); P Holt, P Merkel (MA, USA); P Bonafede, H W Emori (OR, USA); G Gordon, H R Schumacher Jr (PA, USA); J Aelion, K Lohr (TN, USA); C Jackson (UT, USA); R Bettis (WA, USE); G Kerr (Washington DC, USA); L Warrick (WI, USA).

Contributors: HRS contributed to the design and recruitment of the study. JAB contributed to the design and clinical aspects of the study and is the guarantor. DID contributed to the design and recruitment of the study. SM analysed the data. KM contributed to the clinical aspects of the study. JN participated in the design of the study. GAT and JM contributed to the recruitment of the study. All authors contributed to the writing of the paper.

Footnotes

  • Funding Merck Research Laboratories, Rahway, NJ, USA, provided funding to all participating investigators to cover the costs of patient procedures and evaluations.

  • Competing interests HRS is on the Merck arthritis advisory board and has received fees for speaking and organising educational programmes and consultancy fees from Merck Research Laboratories and Pfizer. DID has received fees for speaking and a consultancy fee from Merck Research Laboratories. JAB, SM, KM, and JN are employed by Merck and own shares of Merck common stock.

  • Embedded ImageAn additional box, table, and figure appear on bmj.com

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