| Literature DB >> 19624815 |
Jonas F Ludvigsson1, Lena Brandt, Scott M Montgomery.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Antibody serology is an important tool in the investigation of celiac disease (CD), but does not always correlate with mucosal appearance in the small intestine. Patients with positive CD serology but normal mucosa (Marsh 0) are at increased risk of future CD. In this study we describe a model for identifying and characterizing individuals with normal mucosa but positive CD serology. Such individuals are sometimes referred to as having latent CD.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19624815 PMCID: PMC2724402 DOI: 10.1186/1471-230X-9-57
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Gastroenterol ISSN: 1471-230X Impact factor: 3.067
Figure 1Identification of individuals with latent CD. By linkage of biopsy registers and CD serology registers we identified 40,250 individuals with normal mucosa (and no biopsy record of CD or inflammation) with at least one test for CD serology. 7,324 had at some stage a positive CD serology. Some 50% of these (N = 3,736) had a positive CD serology at time of biopsy. 3,285 (87.9% of individuals with latent CD) had positive IgA, while 451 had positive IgG CD serology. Of 3,736 individuals with latent CD, 228 had positive IgA EMA; 3,117 had positive IgA AGA; and 161 had positive IgA TTGA. IgG EMA 1; IgG AGA 491; IgG TTGA 4. Due to overlap this exceeds 3,736). 303 individuals with IgA AGA had at least 2 positive IgA AGA values within the stipulated time frame (≥2 positive tests: IgG AGA 164; IgA TTGA 10).
Characteristics of individuals with latent celiac disease
| Latent CD | |
|---|---|
| Number | 3,736 |
| Age, yrs (median, range) | 36; 0–91 |
| Children = 15 years (%) | 21.4 |
| Children = 21 years (%) | 27.9 |
| Females (%) | 62.1 |
| Entry year (median, range) | 2001; 1990–2007 |
Clinical characteristics of latent CD – patient chart review.
| EMA; | AGA; | TTGA; | Total; | Total Weighted | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Females | 26 (68) | 24 (67) | 25 (66) | 75 (67) | - |
| Age at first biopsy: median, range (years) | 13 (2–80) | 34 (1–91) | 34 (1–75) | 29 (1–91) | - |
| Year of biopsy, median* | 2003 | 2001 | 2006 | 2004 | - |
| Reported heredity for CD | 12 (32) | 7 (19) | 6 (16) | 25 (22) | 20% |
| Other diseases | |||||
| Diabetes Mellitus, type 1 | 3 (8) | 1 (3) | 4 (10) | 8 (7) | 3% |
| Depression | 1 (3) | 4 (11) | 8 (21) | 13 (12) | 11% |
| Thyroid disease | 2 (5) | 3 (8) | 7 (18) | 12 (11) | 9% |
| Liver disease or increased liver enzymes | 3 (8) | 4 (11) | 4 (10) | 11 (10) | 11% |
| Symptoms | |||||
| Any gastrointestinal symptom# | 31 (82) | 32 (89) | 32 (84) | 95 (85) | 88% |
| Diarrhea | 16 (42) | 18 (50) | 17 (45) | 51 (46) | 49% |
| Weight loss/growth failure | 9 (24) | 7 (20) | 7 (18) | 23 (20) | 20% |
| Abdominal pain | 14 (37) | 18 (50) | 18 (47) | 50 (45) | 49% |
| Constipation | 10 (26) | 4 (11) | 6 (16) | 20 (18) | 12% |
| Fatigue | 6 (16) | 6 (17) | 5 (13) | 17 (15) | 16% |
| Laboratory data | |||||
| Anemia and/or iron-deficiency | 5 (13) | 12 (33) | 12 (32) | 29 (26) | 32% |
| Folic acid deficiency | 2 (5) | 0 (0) | 4 (10) | 6 (5) | 1% |
| B12-deficiency | 4 (10) | 2 (6) | 5 (13) | 11 (10) | 6% |
| Erythrocyte sedimentation rate, increased | 0 (0) | 2 (6) | 3 (8) | 5 (4) | 5% |
Percentages are given within brackets. Although latent CD was evaluated in 120 individuals, data on symptoms and signs (± laboratory measures) were only available in 112 individuals (93.3%).
EMA = Endomysial antibodies. AGA = Antigliadin antibodies. TTGA = Tissue transglutaminase antibodies.
Weighted percentages were estimated to mirror the full sample of study participants.
*Only for year of biopsy was there a statistically significant difference according to CD serology subtype when we corrected for multiple testing (Bonferroni correction [20]. There was no statistically significant difference in prevalence of any symptom or sign according to CD serology subtype.
#Weight loss was included among "any GI symptom". Also reflux symptoms (not listed above); nausea and abdominal gases were included among "any GI symptoms".
Additional information: Two individuals had a diagnosis of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), both were positive for TTGA. Another two individuals had a diagnosis of dermatitis herpetiformis, both were positive for EMA.
Figure 2Overview of individuals with latent CD. *Three individuals were suspected to have reduced the amount of dietary gluten prior to biopsy (due to other family member with CD). A fourth individual had abstained from gluten at an earlier stage but consumed a normal diet at time of biopsy. The most common reason for misclassification was presence of an earlier unrecorded biopsy with villous atrophy (6.1%).
Gluten-free diet in latent CD (%).
| EMA; | AGA; | TTGA; | Total; | Total Weighted | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Informed about gluten-free diet by physician or dietician | 17 (45) | 5 (14) | 8 (21) | 30 (27) | 16% |
| Clinical response to gluten-free diet* | 9/17 (53) | 2/5 (40) | 4/8 (50) | 15/30 (50) | 41% |
| Gluten-free diet at end of follow-up | 10 (26.3) | 1 (3) | 4 (11) | 15 (13) | 5% |
This table shows the proportion of individuals with latent CD that were encouraged to follow a gluten-free diet at some stage, as well as the proportion of individuals on a gluten-free diet at the end of follow-up (until year 2008).
* Percentages were calculated based on the number of individuals receiving information about gluten-free diet.
Comorbidity in 67 biopsy samples – Results of manual examination
| Histopathology | Normal/Latent CD |
|---|---|
| 3,736 (%) | |
| Gastric metaplasia | 4 (0.1) |
| Helicobacter pylori infection | 9 (0.2) |
| Mb Crohn | 1 (<0.1) |
| Colitis: Microscopic/Ulcerative | 11 (0.3) |
| Any IBD* | 14 (0.4) |
We also searched plain biopsy text for autoimmune enteropathy, giardiasis, inflammatory granuloma, lymphoma, other cancer, tropical sprue, postoperative changes, systemic lupus Erythematosus, vasculitis, Whipple's disease, immune deficiency, Behcet's disease, graft vs. host disease/transplantation, sarcoidosis, immunoglobuline disease and Zollinger-Ellison Disease. For these disorders, the computerized search only yielded results that were rejected on manual examination.
*Includes biopsy reports where non-specific IBD was listed.
CD serology – Accreditation of laboratories.
| Laboratory | Analyses | Accreditation Date | Number of serology tests | Accredited proportion* |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Endomysial (IgA) | 29-jan-98 | 6,755 | 95.5 | |
| Gliadin (IgA) | 29-jan-98 | 3,737 | 91.9 | |
| Transglutaminase (IgA) | 19-dec-01 | 2,974 | 95.7 | |
| Endomysial (IgA) | 1996 | 8,243 | 98.0# | |
| Gliadin (IgA) | 1995 | 28,422 | 95.7# | |
| Transglutaminase (IgA) | 2002 | 20,042 | 93.4# | |
| Endomysial (IgA) | 1997 | 10,855 | 98.4# | |
| Gliadin (IgA) | 1997 | 17,426 | 72.2# | |
| Transglutaminase (IgA) | 12-jun-03 | 1,100 | 100.0 | |
| Endomysial (IgA) | 19-dec-96 | 18,884 | 91.9 | |
| Gliadin (IgA) | 19-dec-96 | 14,910 | 79.5 | |
| Transglutaminase (IgA) | 2001 | 2,268 | 99.8# | |
| Gliadin (IgA) | 1999 | 7,166 | 33.8# | |
| Endomysial (IgA) | 1999 | 3,470 | 65.1# | |
| Transglutaminase (IgA) | 1999 | 1,675 | 100# | |
*Proportion of IgA serology samples analyzed after accreditation date. IgG serology samples are not accredited in Sweden.
§Accreditation dates were the same for laboratories from the same university city/region (listed together above).
#When estimating the proportion of IgA CD serology samples analyzed after accreditation date, we have assumed that accreditation took place on the 1st of July the relevant year.