| Literature DB >> 27446825 |
Sébastien La Vieille1, Olga M Pulido2, Michael Abbott1, Terence B Koerner1, Samuel Godefroy3.
Abstract
This paper provides an overview of the latest scientific data related to the safety of uncontaminated oats (<20 ppm of gluten) in the diet of individuals with celiac disease (CD). It updates the previous Health Canada position posted on the Health Canada website in 2007 and a related paper published in 2009. It considers a number of recent studies published between January 2008 and January 2015. While recognizing that a few people with celiac disease seem to be clinically intolerant to oats, this review concludes that oats uncontaminated by gluten-containing cereals (wheat, rye, and barley) can be safely ingested by most patients with celiac disease and that there is no conclusive evidence that the consumption of uncontaminated or specially produced oats containing no greater than 20 ppm gluten by patients with celiac disease should be limited to a specific daily amount. However, individuals with CD should observe a stabilization phase before introducing uncontaminated oats to the gluten-free diet (GFD). Oats uncontaminated with gluten should only be introduced after all symptoms of celiac disease have resolved and the individual has been on a GFD for a minimum of 6 months. Long-term regular medical follow-up of these patients is recommended but this is no different recommendation to celiac individuals on a GFD without oats.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27446825 PMCID: PMC4904695 DOI: 10.1155/2016/1870305
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Can J Gastroenterol Hepatol ISSN: 2291-2789
Clinical studies of the effects of oats on children with celiac disease from January 2008 to January 2015.
| Reference authors, year of publication | Number of subjects tested | Oats exposure | Amount of oats | Lab tests | Biopsy | Drop-out rate | Conclusion |
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| Koskinen et al., 2009, Finland [ |
| 2 years | 50 g/day | TTG IgA | Small-bowel biopsies (IgA deposits) at baseline + 6 m + 24 m: No signs of immune activation or relapse of CD | 2 children experienced abdominal pain but with normal biopsy | Pure oats can be safely added to the GFD of children with CD |
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| Gatti et al., 2013, Italy [ |
| 15 months [6 months oats or placebo (A-B); 3 months washed-out; 6 months oats or placebo (B-A)] | Up to 40 g/day | TTG IgA, antigliadin IgG, and antiavenin Abs | No biopsy | 55/154 (36%) enrolled in group A-B and 42/152 (28%) enrolled in group B-A No information provided about reasons for withdrawals | Addition of noncontaminated oats in the treatment of children with CD does not cause changes in intestinal permeability and gastrointestinal symptoms |
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| Tapsas et al., 2014, Sweden [ |
| Mean = 6.9 years | Not specified | No serology | No biopsy | 34 (11%) did not consume oats. For those having tried oats ( | Most patients did not report adverse effects after long-term consumption of oats |
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Sjöberg et al., 2014 |
| Mean = 13 months | Median = 20 g/day | TTG IgA, antigliadin IgG | No difference between 2 groups in intestinal histology score (Marsh score) | No difference between 2 groups in terms of serology biomarkers and intestinal histology score | |
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Tjellström et al., 2014 |
| 12 months | 25–50 g/day | Endomysial IgA and IgG, antigliadin IgA, and TTG IgA | At baseline: small bowel enteropathy consistent with CD; at 12 months: all children in clinical remission except one child (GFD-std group) who did not undergo a control biopsy | None | Normalisation of small bowel mucosal architecture and decreasing celiac serology markers However, total SCFA remained at a high level in the GFD-oats group compared to the GFD-std group |
Abs: antibodies; CD: celiac disease; GFD: gluten-free diet; IEL: intraepithelial lymphocytes; IgA: immunoglobulin A; IgG: immunoglobulin G; TTG: tissue transglutaminase; GFD-std: standard GFD without oats; GFD-oats: GFD with uncontaminated oats.
Clinical studies of the effects of oats on adults with celiac disease from January 2008 to January 2015.
| Reference authors, year of publication | Number of subjects tested | Oats exposure | Amount of oats | Lab tests | Biopsy | Dropout rate | Conclusion |
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| Guttormsen et al., 2008, Norway [ |
| 2 years | Mean = 24 g/day (minimum 6 months) | Antiavenin IgA, anti-gliadin IgA, and TTG IgA | No biopsy | Not specified | Most adult CD patients can tolerate oats Ingestion of oats does not cause increased levels of IgA oats in CD patients with GFD |
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| Sey et al., 2011, Canada [ |
| 3 months | 50 g/day | TTG IgA | Duodenal biopsies before and after oat challenge (Marsh score): histology scores did not significantly change during oat challenge | One relapse occurred in a patient who became noncompliant with GFD | IgA TTG antibodies remained negative in all patients and the histology scores did not change. Support the safety of uncontaminated oats for patients with CD |
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| Tuire et al., 2012, Finland [ |
| Mean = 11 years | Not specified | Endomysial IgA and TTG IgA | Consumption of oats was the only factor contributing to the persistent IEL | Despite excellent villous recovery, persistent IEL was common among CD patients on a long-term GFD. Consumption of oats was associated with persistent IEL | |
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| Kaukinen et al., 2013, Finland [ |
| Median = 5 years | Median = 20 g/day | Endomysial IgA and TTG IgA | Small-bowel mucosal biopsies were normal in 103 patients | None | Long-term consumption of pure oats proved to be safe for CD patients. Long-term regular follow-up is recommended |
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| Hardy et al., 2015 [ |
| 3 days | 100 g/day |
| No biopsy | 4 subjects did not complete the full 3-day challenge | 34 patients reported no symptoms and 46 reported digestive symptoms. |
Abs: antibodies; CD: celiac disease; GFD: gluten-free diet; IEL: intraepithelial lymphocytes; IgA: immunoglobulin A; IgG: immunoglobulin G; TTG: tissue transglutaminase; GFD-std: standard GFD without oats; GFD-oats: GFD with uncontaminated oats.