Antigout agents
(Redirected from Febuxostat)
| Drug monograph · NCLEX study reference | |
| Therapeutic class | Antigout |
|---|---|
| Pharmacologic class | Xanthine oxidase inhibitors (allopurinol, febuxostat), anti-inflammatory antimitotic (colchicine), uricosuric (probenecid) |
| Onset / peak / duration | Allopurinol lowers urate over days to weeks; colchicine acts within hours on acute flares. |
| Half-life / level | Varies; no routine level. |
| Routes | PO (oral) |
| High-alert (ISMP) | No |
| Black box warning | None |
| Antidote / reversal | Supportive care. |
| Pregnancy / lactation | Use only if clearly needed. |
Nursing pharmacology study reference (NCLEX-style monograph). Numeric values are standard teaching ranges for study and must be verified against current manufacturer labeling before clinical use. This is educational content, not prescribing guidance.
Antigout agents — Antigout; Xanthine oxidase inhibitors (allopurinol, febuxostat), anti-inflammatory antimitotic (colchicine), uricosuric (probenecid).
Identification
- Therapeutic class: Antigout.
- Pharmacologic class: Xanthine oxidase inhibitors (allopurinol, febuxostat), anti-inflammatory antimitotic (colchicine), uricosuric (probenecid).
Pharmacology
- Mechanism of action: Allopurinol and febuxostat reduce uric acid production; colchicine reduces inflammatory response to urate crystals; probenecid increases uric acid excretion.
- Onset / peak / duration: Allopurinol lowers urate over days to weeks; colchicine acts within hours on acute flares.
- Half-life / therapeutic level: Varies; no routine level.
Clinical use
- Indications: Chronic gout and hyperuricemia prevention (allopurinol, febuxostat, probenecid), acute gout flares and prophylaxis (colchicine), tumor lysis prevention (allopurinol).
- Usual dose, route, frequency: Allopurinol PO daily; colchicine PO for flares and low-dose prophylaxis.
- Maximum dose / adjustments: Reduce allopurinol and colchicine in renal impairment; do not start urate-lowering therapy during an acute flare (can worsen it).
Safety
- Contraindications: Colchicine with strong CYP3A4 or P-gp inhibitors in renal or hepatic impairment (toxicity); hypersensitivity.
- Black box warning: None.
- Interactions: Allopurinol with azathioprine and mercaptopurine (severe toxicity), warfarin; colchicine with clarithromycin and other CYP3A4 or P-gp inhibitors (fatal toxicity), statins; probenecid with many renally cleared drugs.
- Pregnancy / lactation: Use only if clearly needed.
- High-alert: No.
Adverse effects
- Common side effects: Allopurinol rash and GI upset; colchicine diarrhea, nausea, cramping.
- Serious effects to report: Allopurinol hypersensitivity and Stevens-Johnson syndrome (linked to HLA-B*5801), colchicine toxicity (severe GI symptoms, myopathy, marrow suppression).
- Antidote / reversal: Supportive care.
Nursing process
- Assessment before administration: Renal and hepatic function, uric acid, current flare status, interacting drugs.
- Interventions during therapy: Do not start allopurinol during an acute attack; encourage fluids; watch for rash.
- Monitor: Uric acid, renal function, CBC (colchicine), skin.
- Evaluation / expected outcome: Fewer gout flares and lower uric acid.
Patient teaching
- Patient teaching: Allopurinol is preventive, not for acute pain; report any rash; drink plenty of fluids; do not exceed colchicine dosing.
- Notify provider if: Rash, severe diarrhea or muscle pain, fever, easy bruising.
- Administration tips: Take allopurinol after meals with fluids; follow colchicine dose limits exactly.