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Evidence-Based Supplement Research
Evidence-Based Supplement Research

Tart cherry intake and serum uric acid: Meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials and evidence from network pharmacology.

  • 2026-06-01
  • Asia Pacific journal of clinical nutrition 35(3)
    • Zhenzhen Zhang
    • Zhiyuan Feng
    • Wei Yan
    • Tianyu Wu
    • Jiayue Xia
    • Junhui Yu
    • Jingyi Yang
    • Yuanyuan Wang
    • Guiju Sun

Study Design

Type
Meta-Analysis
Sample size
n = 392
Population
four randomized trials (eight comparisons; 392 participants)
Methods
Randomized controlled trials comparing tart cherry intake with placebo or usual diet; random effects meta-analysis; network-based analyses and molecular docking

Background and objectives

Tart cherry products have been proposed to lower serum uric acid and reduce gout risk, but clinical findings are inconsistent. This study evaluated the effect of tart cherry intake on serum uric acid concentration and explored possible mechanisms.

Methods and study design

Randomized controlled trials comparing tart cherry intake with placebo or usual diet and reporting serum uric acid concentration were identified from electronic databases. A random effects meta analysis was used to pool standardized mean differences between groups. In parallel, bioactive compounds in tart cherry were retrieved from public databases, and their potential targets related to serum uric acid and gout were investigated using network based analyses and molecular docking.

Results

Four randomized trials (eight comparisons; 392 participants) were included. Tart cherry intake was associated with a modest reduction in serum uric acid concentration compared with control (standardized mean difference -0.22; 95% confidence interval -0.43 to -0.01), with substantial heterogeneity. Network and docking analyses suggested that anthocyanins and other polyphenols may act on inflammatory, oxidative stress and metabolic pathways.

Conclusions

Tart cherry intake may modestly lower serum uric acid concentration, but evidence is limited in quantity and consistency. Larger, rigorously designed randomized trials are needed.

Research Insights

  • Tart cherry intake was associated with a modest reduction in serum uric acid concentration compared with control (standardized mean difference -0.22; 95% confidence interval -0.43 to -0.01)

    Effect
    Beneficial
    Effect size
    Small
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