| Literature DB >> 25705622 |
Simona Gatti1, Matilde Rossi1, Simona Alfonsi2, Alessandra Mandolesi2, Giovanni Cobellis3, Carlo Catassi1.
Abstract
AIM: To review the existing literature on the role and significance of intestinal transglutaminase 2 immunoglobulin A deposits (TG2 deposits) in patients with overt celiac disease (CD), potential celiac disease (PCD), and other autoimmune or gluten-related conditions.Entities:
Keywords: anti-tissue transglutaminase 2; celiac disease; dermatitis herpetiformis; immunofluorescence; intestinal deposits; potential celiac disease
Year: 2014 PMID: 25705622 PMCID: PMC4335401 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2014.00009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Figure 1Small-bowel mucosal immunofluorescence staining of IgA (green) and transglutaminase-2 (red) and co-localization of IgA and TG2 in yellow (arrow). In (A) a healthy control (no co-localization), in (B) a celiac patient with evidence of co-localization (arrow).
Summary of included studies evaluating presence and significance of intestinal deposits in celiac disease and other groups of patients.
| No. | Source (first author) | Study design | Number of participants | Group 1 ( | Inclusion criteria | Group 2 ( | Inclusion criteria | Controls ( | Age | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Tosco ( | O, Cohort, P | 106 | 106 | PCD | – | – | – | 6 years, 8 months | Histological and serological follow-up study in children with PCD |
| 2 | Korponay-Szabo ( | O, Cohort | 33 | 10 | Developing CD | 11 | CD | 12 | 8 years, 1 month | Prevalence of intestinal and extra intestinal TG2 IgA deposits in early stage CD and CD |
| 3 | Salmi ( | O, C.S. | 427 | 223 | Untreated CD | 66 | PCD | 138 | 45 years | Comparison between conventional and new histological parameters (including TG2 deposits) in diagnosis of CD and PCD |
| 4 | Salmi ( | O, Cohort, P | 75 | 25 | EMA− Marsh 1 | 25 | PCD | 25 | 39 years | Role of TG2 IgA deposits in detection of early developing CD |
| 5 | Koskinen ( | O, C.S. | 254 | 71 | CD on short term GFD | 105 | CD on long term GFD | 78 | 47 years | Prevalence of TG2 IgA deposits in CD at diagnosis and after GFD |
| 6 | Koskinen ( | O, C.S. | 103 | 48 | LCD, PCD | 13 | CD | 42 | 37 years | Diagnostic value and gluten-dependency of TG2 IgA deposits in overt and mild enteropathy CD |
| 7 | Kaukinen ( | C, E | 93 | 41 | Suspected CD (normal villi, ↑γδ+ IELs) | 18 | CD | 34 | 46 years, 9 months | Prevalence of TG2 IgA deposits in early stage CD before and after dietary intervention |
| 8 | Maglio ( | O, C.S., R | 344 | 144 | Untreated CD | 109 | PCD | 91 | 6 years, 3 months | Prevalence of TG2 IgA deposits in CD and PCD |
| 9 | Maglio ( | O, C.S. | 203 | 104 | CD <2 years | 179 | CD > 2 years | 18 | 15 months | Prevalence of TG2 IgA deposits in CD children <2 years, negative for serum anti-TG2 Ab |
| 10 | Tosco ( | O, C.S. | 40 | 12 | CD | 28 | PCD | 39 | 7 years | Comparison of Ab secretion to culture supernatants and TG2 deposits in CD and PCD |
| 11 | Kurppa ( | O, Cohort, P | 76 | 42 | Untreated CD | 17 | PCD | 17 | 11 years | Evaluation of deposits at diagnosis in CD, PCD, and controls |
| 12 | Salmi ( | O, C.S., P | 193 | 22 | CD, EMA+ | 151 | CD, EMA− | 20 | 47 years | Comparison of clinical and histological features (including TG2 deposits) in EMA negative and positive CD |
| 13 | Koskinen ( | O, C.S. | 65 | 28 | Responsive CD | 27 | Non-responsive CD | 10 | 48 years | Role of TG2 deposits in distinguishing non-responsive CD from other enteropathies |
| 14 | Koskinen ( | C, E. | 23 | 13 | CD on GFD + oats challenge | 10 | CD on GFD + gluten-challenge | – | 13 years | Response of TG2 deposits to oats challenge |
| 15 | Salmi ( | O, C.S. | 74 | 47 | Untreated DH | 27 | DH on GFD | – | 47 years | Prevalence of TG2 IgA deposits in DH and relation to GFD |
| 16 | Hadjivassiliou ( | O, C.S. | 36 | 97 | GA, other ataxia | 10 | CD | 10 | 59 years, 6 months | Deposition of brain and intestinal TG2 IgA deposits in patients with GA |
| 17 | Stenberg ( | O, C.S. | 16 | 16 | CP with CD | – | – | – | 11 years | Detection of early signs of CD in CP |
| 18 | Maglio ( | O, C.S. | 100 | 33 | T1D on GCD | 12 | Untreated CD | 55 | 11 years | Prevalence of TG2 IgA deposits in children with T1D |
| 19 | Borrelli ( | O, C.S. | 25 | 16 | IgA–D, Marsh 0–1; nine non-CD; seven PCD (IgG pos) | 9 | IgA–D; CD (Marsh 2–3) | 16 | 7 years, 1 month | Detection of TCR γδ IELs and TG2 IgM deposits in IgA–D subjects |
| 20 | Ruuskanen ( | O, Cohort, P | 2815 | 49 | AGA+, tTG−, HLA+, no CD | – | – | 52 | 69 years | Detection of minor inflammatory changes in AGA persistently positive non-CD patients |
| 21 | Tosco ( | O, C.S. | 91 | 39 | PCD | 18 | Serum Ab negative, IEL+ | 34 | 7 years, 1 month | Prevalence of TG2 IgA deposits in PCD |
| 22 | Stenman ( | O, C.S. | 31 | 5 | Untreated CD | 20 | CD on GFD | 6 | 54 years | Correlation between Ab secretion to culture supernatants and TG2 deposits |
| 23 | Tack ( | C, E | 16 | 7 | CD gluten-challenge + placebo | 7 | CD gluten-challenge + EN PEP | – | 55 years | Evaluation of safety and immunogenic effects of AN-PEP in CD |
C, comparative; O, observational; E, experimental; P, prospective; R, retrospective; CD, celiac diseases; PCD, potential celiac disease; LCD, latent celiac disease; GFD, gluten-free diet; T1D, type-1 diabetes; CP, cerebral palsy; GA, gluten-ataxia; AN-PEP, .
Summary of the included studies evaluating the presence of intestinal TG2 deposits in overt celiac disease (CD).
| Reference (first author) | Age (years), median (range) | Overt CD ( | TG2 IgA deposits: prevalence | Diagnostic value (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Korponay- Szabo ( | 78 (4.4–32) | 10 | 10/10 | SE: 100 |
| SP: 100 | ||||
| Salmi ( | 42 (16–81) | 223 | 35/35 | SE: 100 |
| SP: 100 | ||||
| Koskinen ( | 47 (4–79) | 261 | 261/261 | SE: 100 |
| SP: 82 | ||||
| Koskinen ( | 47 (28–68) | 13 | 13/13 | SE: 100 |
| SP: 95.9 | ||||
| Kaukinen ( | 47 (22–68) | 18 | 6/6 | SE: 100 |
| SP: 100 | ||||
| Maglio ( | 63 (6 months–16 years) | 144 | 138/144 | SE: 95.8 |
| SP: 87.9 | ||||
| Tosco ( | 7 | 12 | 12/12 | SE: 100 |
| SP: 80 | ||||
| Maglio ( | <2, 15 months | <2 years: 56 | <2 years: 41/56 | SE: 73.2 |
| >2, 7 years | >2 years: 40 | >2 years: 40/40 | SE: 100 | |
| SP: ne | ||||
| Kurppa ( | 10 (1–15) | 42 | 42/42 | SE: 100 |
| SP: ne | ||||
| Salmi ( | 55 (20–79) | 22 EMA− | 18/18 | SE: 100 |
| 40 (16–81) | 22 EMA+ | 17/17 | SP: 100 |
SE, sensitivity; SP, specificity; ne, not evaluable (no control group).
Summary of the included studies evaluating TG2 deposits in potential celiac disease (PCD).
| Reference (first author) | Age, median (range) | PCD ( | PCD: definition | TG2 IgA deposits: prevalence | Diagnostic value (%) | Intensity | Results of follow-up studies and comparison with other markers |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tosco ( | 6 years, 8 months (18 months–16 years) | 106 | TTG or EMA+, Marsh 0–1 | 66/102 | SE: 64.7 SP: ne | – | At 4 years follow-up, 30.8% develop overt CD. TG2 deposits in the first biopsy was the only marker to predict evolution toward villous atrophy |
| Salmi ( | 40 years (16–81) | 25 | EMA+, Marsh 0–1 | 12/12 | SE: 93 | – | TG2 had the best SE and SP for detecting early developing CD |
| SP: 93 | |||||||
| Maglio ( | 6 years, 4 months (6 months–16 years) | 109 | TTG+, Marsh 0–1 | 74/109 | SE: 67.9 SP: 87.9 | Intensity significantly weaker in PCD compared to CD | – |
| Tosco ( | 7 years (2–17) | 28 | TTG+, Marsh 0–1 | 19/28 | SE: 68 | – | – |
| SP: 80 | |||||||
| Kurppa ( | 11 years (4–17) | 17 | EMA+, Marsh 0–2 | 17/17 | SE: 100 | Less intense in PCD than CD | Seven of eight on a GCD develop overt CD within 2 years |
| SP: 100 | |||||||
| Tosco ( | 7 years, 1 month (9 months–17 years, 11 months) | 39 | EMA or TTG+, normal histology | 33/39 | SE: 85 SP: 91 | – | – |
SE, sensitivity; SP, specificity; PPV, positive predictive value; NPV, negative predictive value; EMA, anti-endomysium antibodies; TTG, anti-transglutaminase antibodies; PCD, potential CD; ne, not evaluable (no control group).