| Literature DB >> 23762036 |
Petula Nijeboer1, Roy L J van Wanrooij, Greetje J Tack, Chris J J Mulder, Gerd Bouma.
Abstract
A small subset of coeliac disease (CD) patients experiences persisting or recurring symptoms despite strict adherence to a gluten-free diet (GFD). When other causes of villous atrophy have been excluded, these patients are referred to as refractory celiac disease (RCD) patients. RCD can be divided in two types based on the absence (type I) or presence (type II) of an, usually clonal, intraepithelial lymphocyte population with aberrant phenotype. RCDI usually runs a benign course and may be difficult to be differentiated from uncomplicated, slow responding CD. In contrast, RCDII can be defined as low-grade intraepithelial lymphoma and frequently transforms into an aggressive enteropathy associated T-cell lymphoma with dismal prognosis. This paper describes the clinical characteristics of RCDI and RCDII, diagnostic approach, and the latest insights in treatment options.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23762036 PMCID: PMC3665175 DOI: 10.1155/2013/518483
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gastroenterol Res Pract ISSN: 1687-6121 Impact factor: 2.260
Figure 1Endoscopic (a) and histologic (b) features found in RCD. Endoscopic abnormalities found in RCD include scalloped configuration of folds and fissuring with a mosaic pattern (a). Biopsies processed for histology show villous atrophy, crypt hyperplasia and increased infiltration of lymphoid cells in the epithelium (b).
Figure 2Flow cytometric analysis to identify aberrant and normal IELs. Cells with a strong CD45 expression and low to intermediate forward and sideward scatter were selected (a), after which IELs expressing intracellular CD3 expression were used for further studies (b). Ab IEL: aberrant IEL population (sCD3-cytCD3+): NL IEL: normal IEL population (sCD3 + cytCD3+).
Figure 3Algorithm for diagnostic approach of RCD.
Summary of treatment modalities evaluated in RCD.
| Therapy | No. of patients | Therapeutic effect | Notes and side effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Thioguanine | 12 RCDI | 10 patients tolerated TG. clinical and histological response was observed in 83% and 78% respectively | 1 patient died within 4 months of therapy due to progression of RCDI. Side effects: muscle spasms, elevation of biochemical liver tests | [ |
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| Azathioprine and Prednisone | 10 RCDI | Clinical improvement in all patients in both groups. 8 RCD type I patients responded histologically, complete histological normalization in 4 patients | 7 RCDII patients died from EATL | [ |
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| Mesalamine and Budesonide | 10 RCDI | 5 patients had complete symptom relief. No conclusion on histological improvement | 4 patients had concomitant microscopic colitis. Side effect: headaches | [ |
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| Budesonide | 23 RCDI | Overall, 76% of the patients had a clinical response to budesonide, considered as complete response in 55%. No histological improvement in any patient. RCDII patients had persistent clonal proliferation of IELs | 1 patient with RCDII died of sepsis and malnutrition. 7 patients had concomitant microscopic colitis. There were no serious adverse events reported | [ |
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| Infliximab | 1 RCDI | Excellent clinical results. Treatment was continued over the following 2 years with a return to near normal histology | No serious adverse events reported | [ |
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| Infliximab | 1 RCDI | Complete clinical improvement. Marked histological improvement | No serious adverse events reported | [ |
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| Cyclosporin | 13 | Clinical response in 8 patients. Normalisation of histology in 5 patients | No serious adverse events reported | [ |
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| Cladribine | 32 RCDII | Clinical response was observed in 81%, complete histological response in 47% and immunological response in 41%. 5 year survival in those who responded was 83% compared to 22% in those who did not | In total, 12 of 32 patients died of whom 42% died of EATL | [ |
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| Autologous stem cell transplantation | 18 RCDII | 13 patients were feasible for auto-SCT and transplanted successfully. Majority showed clinical improvement. 5 patients showed compete histological remission. 4-year survival rate was 66% | In 5 patients, auto-SCT could not be performed; they all died with a median survival of 5.5 months. 1 patient died because of transplant-related complications. EATL was observed in one transplanted patient, after 4 years of follow-up | [ |