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Moving the Needle in Gout Management: The Role of Culture, Diet, Genetics, and Personalized Patient Care Practices

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 14, Issue 17, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu14173590

Keywords

acculturation; gout management; hyperuricemia; culture; race; diet; nutrition; genetics

Funding

  1. CTSA (National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences) [UL1TR002649]
  2. CCTR Endowment Fund of Virginia Commonwealth University

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Gout is a metabolic disorder that is on the rise globally, and its development and recurrence can be influenced by factors such as diet, culture, and social determinants of health. A holistic assessment and culturally tailored dietary recommendations can help optimize treatment outcomes for gout patients. Further research is needed to understand the role of gene-diet interactions in hyperuricemia and gout.
Gout is a metabolic disorder, and one of the most common inflammatory arthritic conditions, caused by elevated serum urate (SU). Gout is globally rising, partly due to global dietary changes and the growing older adult population. Gout was known to affect people of high socioeconomic status. Currently, gout disproportionately affects specific population subgroups that share distinct racial and ethnic backgrounds. While genetics may predict SU levels, nongenetic factors, including diet, cultural traditions, and social determinants of health (SDOH), need to be evaluated to optimize patient treatment outcomes. This approach would allow clinicians to assess whether certain cultural norms, or some SDOH, could be contributing to their patient's risk of developing gout or recurrent gout flares. A cultural assessment may inform the development of culturally tailored dietary recommendations for patients with gout. Causal and association studies investigating the interaction between diet, genetics, and gout, should be cautiously interpreted due to the lack of reproducibility in different racial groups. Optimal gout management could benefit from a multidisciplinary approach, involving pharmacists and nurses. While data on the effect of specific dietary recommendations on managing hyperuricemia and gout may be limited, counseling patients with gout on the role of a healthy diet to optimally control their gout flares and other comorbidities should be part of patient education. Future research investigating the role of a gene-diet interaction in the context of hyperuricemia and gout is needed. Optimal care for patients with gout needs to include a holistic assessment for gout and gout-related comorbidities. Additionally, addressing health beliefs and culture-specific lifestyle factors among patients with gout may reduce their risk of gout flare, improve adherence to urate-lowering therapy (ULT), and achieve health equity in gout management.

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