Dietary Interventions for Gout and Effect on Cardiovascular Risk Factors: A Systematic Review

Gout is one of the most prevalent inflammatory rheumatic disease. It is preceded by hyperuricemia and associated with an increased risk for cardiovascular disease, both related to unhealthy diets. The objective of this systematic review is to better define the most appropriate diet addressing both disease activity and traditional cardiovascular risk factors in hyperuricemic patients. We included clinical trials with patients diagnosed with hyperuricemia or gout, investigating the effect of dietary interventions on serum uric acid (SUA) levels, gout flares and—if available—cardiovascular risk factors. Eighteen articles were included, which were too heterogeneous to perform a meta-analysis. Overall, the risk of bias of the studies was moderate to high. We distinguished four groups of dietary interventions: Calorie restriction and fasting, purine-low diets, Mediterranean-style diets, and supplements. Overall, fasting resulted in an increase of SUA, whilst small (SUA change +0.3 to −2.9 mg/dL) but significant effects were found after low-calorie, purine-low, and Mediterranean-style diets. Studies investigating the effect on cardiovascular risk factors were limited and inconclusive. Since Mediterranean-style diets/DASH (Dietary Approach to Stop Hypertension) have shown to be effective for the reduction of cardiovascular risk factors in other at-risk populations, we recommend further investigation of such diets for the treatment of gout.


Introduction
Gout is one of the most common inflammatory joint disease and its prevalence is estimated at between 0.1% and 10% and is rising, especially in Western countries [1]. For the development of gout, hyperuricemia causing monosodium urate deposition in tissues is mandatory. When gout is not treated adequately it evolves into a chronic and disabling disease. Gout is preceded by hyperuricemia, which is defined by a serum urate (SUA) above >7 mg/dL. Hyperuricemia results most often from reduced renal excretion of urate, frequently combined with a high intake of purines [2]. There is a strong association between SUA level and the risk of developing gout: Subjects with hyperuricemia have a more than 30 times higher risk of developing gout than persons with normal levels [3].
Risk factors for developing hyperuricemia and gout include non-modifiable risk factors (sex, age, race, and genetics) and modifiable risk factors, such as diet and lifestyle [4]. Cohort studies have shown that a typical Western diet (based on a high intake of red and processed meats, refined grains,

Materials and Methods
This systematic review is based on the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) method [13]. Two authors, D.V. and R.d.V., searched Wiley/Cochrane Library, PubMed, Ebsco/CINAHL, and Embase.com up to 1 March 2019. The following key words were used (including synonyms and closely related words) as index terms or free-text words: "Gout", "hyperuricemia", "nutrition therapy", "diet", "uric acid", and "cardiovascular diseases". The search was performed without date, language, or publication status restriction. All duplicate articles were excluded. The full search strategies for all databases can be found in the Supplementary Information. We included (randomized) clinical trials with patients diagnosed with asymptomatic hyperuricemia (SUA >7 mg/dL in men and >6 mg/dL in women) or gout and aged 18 years or older. We included studies investigating the effect of dietary interventions (including supplements) on SUA levels, gout incidence, gout flares and-if available-cardiovascular risk factors/events when compared with other diets, supplements, or standard care. Regarding cardiovascular risk factors, we verified all studies on the effects of the intervention on weight (kg) or body mass index (kg/m 2 ), blood pressure (mmHg), lipid profile (total cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein (HDL), low-density lipoprotein (LDL), triglycerides in mmol/L), blood glucose (mmol/L), metabolic syndrome prevalence, and incidence or prevalence of cardiovascular events and cardiovascular disease. Cohort studies, case reports, animal studies, and articles written in a language other than English were excluded from this review.
Two authors, D.V. and M.H., independently assessed and selected studies eligible for this systematic review based on the title and abstract. Disagreement was resolved by consensus. Two authors, D.V. and W.W., read the full texts of the remaining articles and made a final selection. Data were extracted and presented in a table, including author, title, year, journal, study design, date of data abstraction, description population, age, inclusion and exclusion criteria, sample size, intervention method and duration of follow-up, use of control group, primary and secondary outcomes, control for confounding and effect modification, conclusion, and limitations. The included articles were assessed for the risk of bias using the Cochrane Collaboration's tool (RCT's) and the ROBINS-I (the Risk Of Bias In Non-randomized Studies-of Interventions) assessment tool. Due to the large variation in the duration and intervention and control treatments, it was decided not to conduct a meta-analysis.

Results
The search resulted in 2784 potential articles from PubMed (n = 939), Wiley/Cochrane library (n = 119), CINAHL (n = 138), and Embase (n = 1588). Two additional articles were found through references. In total, 2741 articles were excluded based on double-blind screening of the title and abstract, including 680 duplicates. The remaining 45 full text articles were assessed, and 18 articles were found eligible for this systematic review. See Figure 1 for the flowchart of the search and selection process. Overall, the risk of bias of both randomized and non-randomized studies was moderate to high, as shown in Figures 2 and 3.  were extracted and presented in a table, including author, title, year, journal, study design, date of  data abstraction, description population, age, inclusion and exclusion criteria, sample size,  intervention method and duration of follow-up, use of control group, primary and secondary  outcomes, control for confounding and effect modification, conclusion, and limitations. The included articles were assessed for the risk of bias using the Cochrane Collaboration's tool (RCT's) and the ROBINS-I (the Risk Of Bias In Non-randomized Studies-of Interventions) assessment tool. Due to the large variation in the duration and intervention and control treatments, it was decided not to conduct a meta-analysis.

Results
The search resulted in 2784 potential articles from PubMed (n = 939), Wiley/Cochrane library (n = 119), CINAHL (n = 138), and Embase (n = 1588). Two additional articles were found through references. In total, 2741 articles were excluded based on double-blind screening of the title and abstract, including 680 duplicates. The remaining 45 full text articles were assessed, and 18 articles were found eligible for this systematic review. See Figure 1 for the flowchart of the search and selection process. Overall, the risk of bias of both randomized and non-randomized studies was moderate to high, as shown in Figures 2 and 3.     All included articles are summarized in Table 1. The following two paragraphs are dedicated to the effects of the studied interventions on (1) SUA levels and (2) cardiovascular risk factors (blood pressure, lipid profile, glucose, and weight). No studies were found regarding the incidence of cardiovascular events/disease. Most studies had SUA as the primary outcome. The various dietary interventions were categorized in four groups: (a) Calorie restriction and fasting, (b) purine-low diets, (c) Mediterranean-style diets, and (d) supplements.

Calorie Restriction and Fasting
Six studies were found investigating the effect of diet interventions with different grades of calorie restriction or fasting. Maclachlan et al. (1967) studied the effects of combinations of a purine-low diet, fasting, and alcohol intake in a 6-week study [14]. Nine gouty subjects (n = 4 alcoholics) were admitted to hospital. SUA at baseline was measured after urate-lowering therapy (ULT) was discontinued and ranged from 7.2 to 13.9 mg/dL. This level decreased after a 2-week purine-low diet (average = −1.4 mg/dL). After one day of fasting, all subjects showed a rise in SUA levels, with a mean difference of 1.1 mg/dL (1-day fasting) and 2.0 mg/dL (2-day fasting), which returned rapidly to near baseline values after 24 h of refeeding. During a second period of fasting, subjects used alcohol (79-112 g, whiskey) on the two consecutive days of fasting. The mean average increase in SUA in the subjects with gout was 2.4 mg/dL compared to 2.0 mg/dL on fasting without alcohol. Increases in SUA were accompanied by decreases in urate excretion. The subjects experienced 24 gout attacks in total, with most of these attacks (n = 19) directly following an increase of SUA of at least 1 mg/dL.   In group change intervention group: +0.1 ± 0.8mg/dL, in group change control group: +0.1 ± 0.7mg/dL Scott et al. (1977) focused on the effect of a low-calorie and low-carbohydrate diet, which was not further defined, in 20 obese subjects (>10% above ideal body weight) until 'adequate' weight reduction was achieved (duration unknown) [15]. Not all subjects were diagnosed with gout or hyperuricemia (no numbers given). A mean weight loss of 7.0 kg was accompanied by a mean decrease in plasma urate of 0.5 mg/dL (p = 0.007) and lower levels of urinary urate. Yamashita et al. (1986) performed a pilot study in 27 overweight subjects (BMI >26 kg/m 2 ) of whom 19 (70%) met the criteria for hyperuricemia (gout prevalence unknown) [16]. The pilot study included hospitalization of the subjects and a gradual weekly reduction of total calorie intake (1500-1200-1000-800 kcal/day) with a parallel reduction in dietary purine intake from 154 to 116 mg/day. The 800-kcal diet was kept constant afterwards until the end of the study (mean duration 9 weeks). Food intake was checked by doctors and nurses. Exercise therapy was added to the regime after the reduction of total calorie intake to 800 kcal/day. The mean weight loss at time of discharge (up to 14 weeks) was 7% to 8% of the initial body weight. This was accompanied by a decrease in urate of 1.3 mg/dL in females and 1.8 mg/dL in male subjects (p < 0.01). The authors concluded that a gradual reduction in kilocalories led to a decrease in SUA levels. Tinahones et al. (1995Tinahones et al. ( -1997 examined the effect of a three-week 1200-kcal diet followed by a 3-week 2500-kcal diet in 36 subjects with hyperuricemia [17,18]. Both diets contained 50% of energy (en%) carbohydrates, 20 en% protein, and 30 en% fat. Subjects were advised to avoid foods with a purine level >75 mg/100 g. The group was divided into 20 subjects with hyperuricemia (group I) and 16 subjects with both hyperuricemia and hypertriglyceridemia (group II). The mean weight loss after the intervention in group I was 4.0 kg and 4.8 kg in group II. After three weeks on the 1200-kcal diet, the SUA levels dropped non-significantly with 0.63 and 1.28 mg/dL in groups 1 and 2, respectively. SUA increased again to levels still below baseline after three weeks on the 2500-kcal diet.
The study of Dessein et al. (2000) only included subjects with gout [19]. Thirteen subjects with recurrent gout (>two self-reported attacks in the last 4 months) and obesity started with a 1600-kcal diet (40 en% carbohydrates, 30 en% protein) for 16 weeks. Weight loss and a decrease in the frequency of gout attacks occurred in all except one subject. Mean weight loss compared to baseline was 8% (p = 0.002) and the frequency of monthly attacks decreased from 2.1 to 0.6 (p = 0.001). The mean SUA decrease after the intervention was 1.69 mg/dL and SUA normalized in 7 of the 12 subjects with hyperuricemia (58%). Further follow-up of nine subjects showed no significant change in BMI and SUA after 12 months compared to week 16 of the intervention.
The last study on fasting was performed by Habib et al. (2014) [20]. They examined the effect of Ramadan (fasting, including no drinking from sunrise to sunset, for one month) on SUA and gout activity in patients from an Israeli hospital with gout and compared results with those in subjects with gout who did not participate in the fasting period of Ramadan. Forty-three subjects completed the study and no significant difference was found in adherence to a low-purine diet, gouty activity, and SUA between both groups. Among the fasting subjects, there were no signs of dehydration, which is thought to be the main mechanism leading to a suspected SUA rise during Ramadan.

Purine-Low Diet
Two intervention studies were found examining the effect of a purine-low diet on SUA and one study examining the effect of dietary education of subjects on the beneficial effects of a purine-low diet on SUA and gout activity. The study of Peixoto et al. (2001) investigated the effect of a purine-low diet in 55 subjects with hyperuricemia and hypertension [21]. The diet recommended avoidance of foods with purine >100 mg/100 g products and a decrease in the consumption of foods with moderate purine contents (9-100 mg purine/100 g food). Intake (kcal, macronutrients, purine, oxalic acid) was measured with a 24-h recall and a semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire. The effect of diet (group 1) was compared with the effects of (group 2) subjects treated with a purine-low diet combined with allopurinol (150-300 mg) and (group 3) subjects receiving medication only without a diet intervention. SUA levels were significantly reduced at week 12 in all three groups (−1.2, −2.5, and −2.4 mg/dL, respectively, p < 0.001), without any statistical difference between groups. At week 24, a further decrease in SUA was only seen in group 1 (−2.1 mg/dL compared to baseline, p < 0.001). SUA in groups 2 and 3 slightly increased in the period between 12 and 24 weeks, although SUA at 24 weeks was still significantly lower compared to baseline (p < 0.05). No information was given on medication adherence in groups 2 and 3.
Cardona et al. (2005) focused on subjects with gout and currently not on ULT and implemented a low-purine diet for two weeks [22]. Subjects were instructed to avoid certain foods, such as meat, poultry, fish, alcohol, and some legumes/vegetables. Sixty-four subjects with gout participated, with a mean SUA level of 7.7 mg/dL at baseline. After two weeks following a purine-low diet, urate decreased to 0.57 mg/dL (p = 0.01). Holland et al. (2015) studied the effect of dietary advice on 29 subjects with gout on a stable dose of ULT (allopurinol 100-900 mg/day) [23]. The control group received advice at baseline regarding the importance of compliance with drug therapy, the benefit of weight loss and exercise, and the benefit of reduced alcohol intake. On top of that, the intervention group received comprehensive dietary advice based on the guidelines provided by the British Society of Rheumatology (restriction on high-purine foods, restricted intake of protein, and an emphasis on the importance of weight loss, not further defined) [33] as well as specific guidelines on alcohol, use of sugar, and higher intakes of healthy foods, such as dairy products, vegetables, nuts, legumes, fruits, and whole grains, based on the recommendations by Choi (2010) [34]. At baseline, the mean SUA was 4.88 mg/dL in both groups. At six months, there was a significant difference in diet modification and knowledge of gout (based on the number of correct responses on a 13-item questionnaire regarding cause, gout attacks, medication, target SUA level, and diet) in favor of the intervention group (respectively p = 0.009, p < 0.001) but no significant difference in SUA (intervention group 5.04 mg/dL versus control group 4.54 mg/dL, p > 0.05).

Mediterranean-Style Diets
In the last five years, more studies were published on the efficacy of more plant-based diets with less meat, fish, and dairy products. The Mediterranean diet and the Dietary Approach to Stop Hypertension (DASH) are examples favoring the use of fruits, vegetables, legumes, olive oil, nuts, and whole grains. Consumption of wine, dairy products, and poultry is moderate and low consumption of red meat, sweet beverages, creams, and pastries is advised [35]. Chatzipavlou et al. (2013) performed a pilot study in 12 subjects with hyperuricemia (male SUA >7.0 mg/dL, female >5.7 mg/dL) investigating the effect of a Cretan-style Mediterranean diet (1800-2400 kcal, rich in monounsaturated fatty acids (MUFAs, e.g., olive oil), legumes, cereals/bread, fruit, and vegetables; moderate in alcohol and dairy; and low in meat) on SUA [24]. Six subjects (50%) followed the diet for at least 8 weeks. Mean SUA at baseline was 9.12 (range 8.2-13.8) mg/dL and decreased to 6.2 (range 5.5-7.8) mg/dL in the six subjects. No gout attacks were experienced during the intervention.
Zhang et al. (2016) compared a standard diet according to dietary guidelines, with a diet enriched with soybeans and fruit products in a 3-month randomized controlled trial with 187 subjects with hyperuricemia [25]. Subjects with hypertension, diabetes mellitus, and subjects using ULT were excluded. After three months, no significant difference was found in daily food intake between groups. Surprisingly, and not intended, the consumption of fruits and soybean products increased equally in both the intervention and control group. After three months, both groups showed a significant decrease in serum urate, −1.0 and −1.1 mg/dL, respectively (p < 0.001 within both groups). Tang et al. (2017) performed a randomized controlled trial on the effect of the DASH in subjects with pre-or stage 1 hypertension [26]. They included 103 subjects in their RCT, 24 of them with hyperuricemia (SUA ≥6.0 mg/dL). After a two-week run-in period on an isocaloric 'American' (control) diet, they were randomized to either continue the control diet or start the DASH. While SUA remained stable in the control group (−0.1 mg/dL), a decrease of −1.0 mg/dL was seen in the intervention group after 90 days (p = 0.03). The same research group (Juraschek et al., 2018) also conducted an 8-week study among African Americans with controlled hypertension, categorized in five baseline SUA groups (≤5, >5-6, >6-7, >7-8, and >8 mg/dL) [27]. Of 117 subjects, 64 had a baseline SUA >6 mg/dL. In this superiority study, DASH (including 240 USD in a debit account to purchase foods) with and without additional coaching was compared. No difference was found between or in the two groups after 8 weeks, although a significant trend was found toward greater SUA reduction among subjects with higher baseline SUA, with a decrease of −1.02 (−2.37, 0.32) in 18 subjects with a baseline SUA >8 mg/dL (p = 0.008).

Supplements
Five studies examined the effect of nutrition supplements on serum urate in subjects with hyperuricemia or gout. Dalbeth et al. (2012) examined the effect of skim milk powder on the frequency of gout flares in 120 patients who met the American College of Rheumatology (ACR) criteria for gout [28]. In this randomized double-blind controlled trial, patients received (1) skim milk, (2) skim milk enriched with glycomacropeptide (GMP) and G600 milk fat extract, or (3) skim milk enriched with lactose powder. The frequency of gout flares decreased significantly in all three groups, without any difference between the groups. SUA did not change significantly. Stamp et al. (2013) performed an open label, parallel group, randomized controlled trial on patients with gout and SUA >6 mg/dL [29]. Of the 40 included patients, 20 were not on ULT (groups 1 and 2) and 20 used ULT (groups 3 and 4). The four groups received the following treatment: (1) Daily supplement of 500 mg vitamin C, (2) allopurinol (50-100 mg daily), (3) increase current dose of allopurinol with 50 to 100 mg daily, and (4) add 500 mg of vitamin C to the current dose of allopurinol (REF). At the end of the 8-week duration of this study, the allopurinol groups 2 and 3 showed significant superiority, with lower SUA compared to the vitamin C groups 1 and 4 (p < 0.05).
A second study on the effect of vitamin C was performed by Azzeh et al. (2017). They investigated the effect of a daily 500-mg vitamin C supplement on SUA in subjects with hyperuricemia or gout [31]. In this study, 30 subjects were included, 15 with gout and 15 with hyperuricemia. After 8 weeks, the SUA level insignificantly increased (+0.31 mg/dL, p > 0.05) in subjects with gout and significantly decreased in the group with asymptomatic hyperuricemia (−0.78 mg/dL, p < 0.05).
Kubomura et al. (2016) conducted a double-blind placebo-controlled study investigating the effect of tuna extract on SUA in subjects with asymptomatic hyperuricemia [30]. The rationale behind this supplementation was that imidazole compounds, as found in tuna extract, might affect the acidity of body fluids, renal functions, and organic acid levels associated with reabsorption of urate in the glycolytic pathway. The subjects were divided in three groups: (1) Placebo, (2) low-dose tuna extract (239 mg/day), and (3) high-dose tuna extract (477 mg/day). Urate levels in all groups decreased compared to baseline in week 4 (0.07, 0.23, and 0.34 mg/dL, respectively). An additional measurement two weeks after the intervention showed that SUA in the high-dose tuna extract group had further decreased, with −0.49 mg/dL compared to +0.14 mg/dL in the placebo group from baseline (p < 0.05). Yamanaka et al. (2018) recently performed a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, which investigated the ability of Lactobacillus delbrueckii ssp. bulgaricus and Streptococcus thermophilus (hereafter summarized as PA-3) to decrease SUA in 25 subjects with hyperuricemia or gout [32]. ULT was discontinued 4 weeks before the intervention. Subjects subsequently received yoghurt beverages with PA-3 or without PA-3 (placebo) twice a day (2 × 100 g) for 8 weeks. SUA did not change in the intervention group (0 mg/dL) and increased in the control group (+ 0.2 mg/dL, not significant).

Diet Intervention and Changes in Cardiovascular Risk Factors
The studies in which cardiovascular risk factors were also considered are listed in Table 2 with a summary of the outcomes for blood pressure, lipid profile, glucose, and body weight. All diet categories contained studies covering cardiovascular risk factors, with the exception of supplements. Tinahones [17,18] 1995/1997 -

Calorie Restriction and Fasting
As expected, calorie-restricted interventions resulted in significant weight loss. Although the duration and amount of calorie restriction (800-1600 kcal) between studies differed, the decrease in weight was approximately 5% to 8% of baseline body weight (Dessein, Tinahones, Scott, Yamashita). Scott, Tinahones, and Dessein also showed significant decreases in total cholesterol and triglycerides, which was accompanied by slight changes in HDL. Dessein et al. also reported a significantly lower LDL (baseline 3.5 ± 1.2; end 2.7 ± 0.8 mmol/L, p = 0.004) after 16 weeks. All lipid levels in the study of Tinahones returned to values close to baseline levels upon completion of the 2500-kcal diet. No data were published on blood pressure and glucose in the studies on calorie restriction and fasting. Cardona (2005) and Peixoto (2001) et al. investigated the effect of a purine low diet on weight, total cholesterol, triglycerides, and glucose. Weight remained stable in both studies. Total cholesterol and triglycerides increased slightly after 12 weeks in the study by Peixoto (not significant) and decreased in the 2-week study by Cardona (p < 0.001 for total cholesterol and triglycerides). Glucose at baseline was slightly increased in the study by Cardona et al. (6.0 ± 1.1 mmol/L) and improved significantly within 2 weeks (−0.3 ± 0.7, p < 0.001), whereas the subjects in the study by Peixoto et al. had lower baseline glucose levels, which also decreased though not significantly. Peixoto also looked into the effect of the 12-week purine-low diet on blood pressure. Only group 1 (purine-low diet without medication) showed significant decreases of both systolic as well as diastolic blood pressure (baseline 150 ± 22.6/102 ± 17.3 mmHg; end 133 ± 21.7/92 ± 12 mmHg, p < 0.05). It should be mentioned that all patients were known to have hypertension and on a stable dose of antihypertensive medication during the intervention. Physical activity and smoking did not change during the study.

Mediterranean-Style Diets
In the study by Tang  The Japanese subjects in the high fruit and soybean product diet (Zhang et al.) had a lower mean BMI at baseline (both groups BMI 25 kg/m 2 ) than the Greek subjects in the study by Chatzipavlou and lost some weight, which was only significant (BMI: −0.5 kg/m 2 , p < 0.05) in group 1 (standard diet, not the fruit and soybean product group). In the intervention group, a small significant decrease was seen in total cholesterol and triglycerides, whilst no changes were seen in HDL in contrary to a small increase of HDL in the control group. The subjects were normotensive and not (pre-) diabetic at baseline and showed no change in blood pressure and glucose during the intervention.

Discussion
Diet interventions, including low-calorie diets (but not fasting), purine-low diets, and different variations of the Mediterranean diet, were able to decrease SUA in patients with asymptomatic hyperuricemia or gout. The range in SUA change after the interventions (excluding fasting) was +0.3 to −2.9 mg/dL. Most studies included in this review reported baseline SUA between 6.5 and 9.7 mg/dL According to the EULAR guideline, this implicates a required decrease of 0.5 to 3.7 mg/dL to achieve target levels (11). Only the DASH in the study by Tang et al. was able to reach clinically significant SUA levels below 6 mg/dL.
In addition to the small effect size, the quality of the studies overall was low to moderate due to insufficient attention given to confounding variables (e.g., exercise), small groups, absence of control groups, insufficient information on intervention methods, lack of distinction between intervention and control dietary intervention, no information on adherence to the intervention, and vagueness about dropouts.
A more detailed view on the content of the three diet categories (calorie restriction, purine low, Mediterranean) reveals that the diets look very different at first sight but also have characteristics in common, such as less animal protein, less saturated fatty acids, and less alcohol, resulting in a less energy-dense and thus lower-calorie diet. Although both the purine-low and the Mediterranean diets are low in animal-based purines, they differ in their levels of plant-based purine from legumes and vegetables. This could be an important difference, as observational studies have shown that in fact, higher intakes of legumes are associated with a significantly lower risk of gout [36,37]. In addition, Mediterranean-style diets contain more vegetables, fruit, and whole-wheat products, with an expected higher intake of fiber. High intake of dietary fibers (or acetate, a short chain fatty acid and metabolic product of fiber) had a positive effect on the resolution of a gout flare in an experimental model of mice with gout [38]. No effect was described on SUA.
An optimal diet for this patient group not only reduces SUA but also reduces cardiovascular risk factors. In this review, the number of studies investigating the effect of the different diet interventions on cardiovascular risk outcomes was little and again the quality was low to moderate. Furthermore, it should be noted that some interventions were quite demanding and difficult to implement in the daily life of gout patients not admitted to hospital.
Calorie restriction seems to be an effective strategy for weight loss (5% to 8% of initial body weight) and improvement of the lipid profile. The long-term feasibility of a low caloric intake is, however, questionable. Mediterranean-style diets also seem to induce weight loss (0%-4%) and improve lipid profiles. Blood pressure was measured in only two studies, with one study showing no effect (Zhang et al.). The Peixoto study on the effect of a purine-low diet versus medication showed a significant decrease in both systolic and diastolic blood pressure in the diet without medication group. Studies of purine-low diets showed either no further data, no effect, or conflicting results.
Most recent studies on the prevention of cardiovascular disease in other 'at-risk' populations (e.g., patients with diabetes or hypertension) focus on the DASH, which has showed significant reduction in both systolic (−11.4 mmHg, 95%CI −15.9 to −6.9, p < 0.001) and diastolic blood pressure (−5.5 mmHg, 95%CI −8.2 to −2.7, p < 0.001) among individuals with and without hypertension [39]. Furthermore, adherence to the DASH has shown a reduction of LDL cholesterol levels and reduction of the risk for chronic heart disease and stroke [35,40]. We found two studies investigating the DASH in a (sub) population with hyperuricemia but results on cardiovascular risk factors, such as blood pressure, were not specified for the patient group with hyperuricemia.
In this review, we decided to not include cohort studies and only focused on interventions because these are often more extensively described and less influenced by confounding factors. However, the intervention studies that were included differed substantially and most of them had a moderate to high risk of bias. Therefore, we did not perform a meta-analysis on the effect of the different interventions on SUA. Moreover, most studies were of short duration and lacked long-term follow-up data.
Overall, the different types of diet interventions gave a small decrease in SUA levels, but it is difficult to draw conclusions, as the quality of the studies was low with a high risk of bias. The Mediterranean-style diet seems to be the most suitable long-term diet for the targeted patient group, as it addresses both SUA as well as cardiovascular risk factors and has been more extensively studied in patients with a high cardiovascular risk (without hyperuricemia/gout). Effects of the Mediterranean diet on patients with gout or hyperuricemia, however, have not yet been studied sufficiently. A purine-low diet could be an alternative, although this diet is less comprehensive and mainly focuses on its effect on SUA. Based on the current evidence, however, a Mediterranean diet low in animal-based purines obviously adds the benefits of both diets. In the category of Mediterranean-style diets, the DASH is most probably best defined and evidence based regarding cardiovascular risk factors.
In addition, we recommend emphasizing lifestyle therapy more in guidelines for the treatment of hyperuricemia and gout. We also question whether making patients aware of the potential effects of diet and lifestyle might be easier when symptoms are still present instead of suppressed by medication. Feeling any effect of one's own lifestyle improvement might be motivating and helpful to reduce long-term use of medication.
Since evidence is scarce and animal-and plant-based purines might have different effects on SUA, we suggest a pilot study comparing the effect of a whole food plant-based diet (plant-based purines only) compared to a purine-low diet regarding SUA, disease activity, and cardiovascular risk factors in patients with gout.