Dietary Factors and Risk of Gout: A Two-Sample Mendelian Randomization Study

Author:

Ou Guosen1ORCID,Wu Jialin1,Wang Shiqi1ORCID,Jiang Yawen1,Chen Yaokang1,Kong Jingwen1,Xu Huachong1ORCID,Deng Li1ORCID,Zhao Huan1,Chen Xiaoyin1ORCID,Xu Lu1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Jinan University, Guangzhou 510632, China

Abstract

Background: Dietary intervention is the preferred approach for the prevention and clinical management of gout. Nevertheless, the existing evidence regarding the influence of specific foods on gout is insufficient. Methods: We used two-sample Mendelian randomization for genetic prediction to analyze the relationship between the intake of more than a dozen daily food items, such as pork, beef, cheese, and poultry, and dietary macronutrient intake (fat, protein, carbohydrates, and sugar) and the risk of developing gout and elevating the serum uric acid level. Inverse-variance weighted MR analyses were used as the main evaluation method, and the reliability of the results was tested by a sensitivity analysis. Results: Cheese intake was associated with lower serum uric acid levels, and tea intake (OR = 0.523, [95%CI: 0.348~0.784], p = 0.002), coffee intake (OR = 0.449, [95%CI: 0.229~0.882], p = 0.020), and dried fruit intake (OR = 0.533, [95%CI: 0.286~0.992], p = 0.047) showed a preventive effect on the risk of gouty attacks. In contrast, non-oily fish intake (β = 1.08, [95%CI: 0.24~1.92], p = 0.012) and sugar intake (β = 0.34, [95%CI: 0.03~0.64], p = 0.030) were risk factors for elevated serum uric acid levels, and alcohol intake frequency (OR = 1.422, [95%CI: 1.079~1.873], p = 0.012) was a risk factors for gout predisposition. Conclusions: These results will significantly contribute to the formulation and refinement of nutritional strategies tailored to patients afflicted with gout.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

China Postdoctoral Science Foundation

Guangdong Basic and Applied Basic Research Foundation

Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities

Scientific Research Project of the Guangdong Provincial Bureau of Traditional Chinese Medicine

Publisher

MDPI AG

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