| Literature DB >> 27196596 |
Jonas F Ludvigsson1, Lars Agreus2, Carolina Ciacci3, Sheila E Crowe4, Marilyn G Geller5, Peter H R Green6, Ivor Hill7, A Pali Hungin8, Sibylle Koletzko9, Tunde Koltai10, Knut E A Lundin11, M Luisa Mearin12, Joseph A Murray13, Norelle Reilly14, Marjorie M Walker15, David S Sanders16, Raanan Shamir17, Riccardo Troncone18, Steffen Husby19.
Abstract
The process of transition from childhood to adulthood is characterised by physical, mental and psychosocial development. Data on the transition and transfer of care in adolescents/young adults with coeliac disease (CD) are scarce. In this paper, 17 physicians from 10 countries (Sweden, Italy, the USA, Germany, Norway, the Netherlands, Australia, Britain, Israel and Denmark) and two representatives from patient organisations (Association of European Coeliac Societies and the US Celiac Disease Foundation) examined the literature on transition from childhood to adulthood in CD. Medline (Ovid) and EMBASE were searched between 1900 and September 2015. Evidence in retrieved reports was evaluated using the Grading of Recommendation Assessment, Development and Evaluation method. The current consensus report aims to help healthcare personnel manage CD in the adolescent and young adult and provide optimal care and transition into adult healthcare for patients with this disease. In adolescence, patients with CD should gradually assume exclusive responsibility for their care, although parental support is still important. Dietary adherence and consequences of non-adherence should be discussed during transition. In most adolescents and young adults, routine small intestinal biopsy is not needed to reconfirm a childhood diagnosis of CD based on European Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition (ESPGHAN) or North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition (NASPGHAN) criteria, but a biopsy may be considered where paediatric diagnostic criteria have not been fulfilled, such as, in a patient without biopsy at diagnosis, additional serology (endomysium antibody) has not been performed to confirm 10-fold positivity of tissue transglutaminase antibodies or when a no biopsy strategy has been adopted in an asymptomatic child. Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://www.bmj.com/company/products-services/rights-and-licensing/Entities:
Keywords: CELIAC DISEASE; COELIAC DISEASE; GLUTEN
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27196596 PMCID: PMC4975833 DOI: 10.1136/gutjnl-2016-311574
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gut ISSN: 0017-5749 Impact factor: 23.059
Histology in children and adults with suspected coeliac disease (CD)
| Children | Adults | |
|---|---|---|
| Is a biopsy necessary for diagnosis? | Dependent on TG2 level, HLA status—if anti-TG2 titres are high (>10 times the upper limit of normal), the ESPGHAN guidelines have an option to diagnose CD | Recommendation for biopsy—all guidelines emphasise the combined use of biopsy and serological analyses for diagnosis. |
| How many biopsies? And where from? | 4–6 including 2 from bulb, as focality was present in 18%, patchiness in 53% and at least 1 normal biopsy fragment was present in 36% of the cases. Sometimes, changes compatible with CD are only seen in the bulb, | At least four, including bulb biopsy. |
| Adherence to guidelines for biopsy? | In those without histological evidence of CD, fewer biopsies are obtained with none documented from the bulb. Failure to take the recommended number of biopsies could result in some missed cases of CD. | Adherence to submitting ≥4 specimens is low in the USA. |
| Intraepithelial lymphocytes/100 enterocytes. What is the cut-off count? | Normal architecture with increased IELs is considered non-specific in paediatric guidelines. | Normal architecture with ≥25 IELs/100 enterocytes has been validated as a cut-off point in adults. |
GFD, gluten-free diet; IEL, intraepithelial lymphocyte; TG2, transglutaminase 2.