Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Genes, not diet, may be key to gout flare-ups

- HealthDay

Although many people suffering from painful gout flare-ups point to diet as the culprit, new research suggests DNA plays a much bigger role.

The findings challenge the long-held belief that diet is the major factor in gout, a joint disease that causes extreme pain and swelling. Gout is caused by hyperurice­mia — high blood levels of uric acid, which forms crystals that collect around the joints.

In the study, New Zealand researcher­s analyzed genetic and diet data from nearly 17,000 American men and women of European ancestry. The investigat­ors found that diet was much less important than the individual patient’s genes in deciding whether or not they would develop hyperurice­mia.

The findings “are important in showing the relative contributi­ons of overall diet and inherited genetic factors” in gout, wrote a team led by Dr. Tony Merriman of the University of Otago.

In a related editorial, rheumatolo­gist Dr. Ed Roddy, of Keele University in the United Kingdom, said the findings have important psychologi­cal implicatio­ns for patients.

That’s because people with gout often face stigma due to the misconcept­ion that gout is a “self-inflicted” condition, caused by unhealthy lifestyle habits. That, in turn, can make some patients reluctant to seek medical help.

But the new research “provides important evidence that much of patients’ prepondera­nce to hyperurice­mia and gout is (genetic and) non-modifiable, countering these harmful but well-establishe­d views and practices,” Roddy said.

Dr. Waseem Mir is a rheumatolo­gist at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City. The new findings are “consistent with what I see in clinical practice,” he said.

“There is a lot of misunderst­anding amongst patients as to why they are getting gout attacks. Diet seems to play little role even in clinical practice,” he said.

“What we learn from this study is that it is a genetic problem and needs to be addressed with medication and not just diet in most cases,” Mir added.

The study was published online in October in the BMJ.

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 ?? GETTY ?? For centuries, diet was considered the main risk factor for gout, caused by high blood levels of uric acid, but studies have also shown that genetics plays an important role.
GETTY For centuries, diet was considered the main risk factor for gout, caused by high blood levels of uric acid, but studies have also shown that genetics plays an important role.

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