| Literature DB >> 28316996 |
Lyudmila V Savvateeva1, Svetlana I Erdes2, Anton S Antishin2, Andrey A Zamyatnin3.
Abstract
Celiac disease (CD) is an autoimmune enteropathy triggered by the ingestion of dietary gluten from some cereals mainly in individuals carrying the HLA-DQ2 and/or HLA-DQ8 haplotypes. As an autoimmune disease, CD is manifested in the small intestine in the form of a progressive and reversible inflammatory lesion due to immune response to self-antigens. Indeed, CD is one of the most challenging medicosocial problems in current gastroenterology. At present, the global CD prevalence is estimated at approximately 1% based on data sent from different locations and available CD screening strategies used. However, it is impossible to estimate global CD prevalence without all the data from the world, including Russia. In this review, we summarize the data on the incidence and prevalence of CD across geographically distinct regions of Russia, which are mostly present in local Russian scientific sources. Our conclusion is that the situation of CD prevalence in Russia is higher than is commonly believed and follows global tendencies that correspond to the epidemiologic situation in Europe, America, and Southwest Asia.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28316996 PMCID: PMC5337843 DOI: 10.1155/2017/2314813
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol Res ISSN: 2314-7156 Impact factor: 4.818
Figure 1The celiac iceberg (adapted from Catassi et al. [8] and Fasano and Catassi [9]).
CD screening (in patients with manifestation of clinical symptoms).
| Serology (serologic markers) | Endoscopy of duodenum (mucosal morphologic alternations | Genotype (genetic markers) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| IgA anti-tissue transglutaminase antibodies (IgA anti-tTG, IgG anti-tTG antibodies) | Mucous membrane thickness | HLA-typing | |
| Anti-endomysial antibodies (AEA, IgA-anti-EMA) | Villus height | ||
| Anti-deamidated gliadin peptide (IgA anti-DGP, IgG anti-DGP) | Crypt depth | ||
| Crypt-villus ratio | |||
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| Specificity and sensitivity of test method; the active period of the disease; long-term gluten-free diet | Similar histological pattern of some other diseases; long-term gluten-free diet | — |
Some studies described in the current review still used outdated methodology for the serologic detection of IgA anti-gliadin antibodies (IgA AGA, IgG AGA).
These criteria are particularly used for the diagnosis of CD, according to Marsh-Oberhuber classification [23].
CD incidence rate per the region population.
| Region | Year | Age group | Sex ratio | Screening test | Biopsy | CD (%) | Author |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arkhangelsk region | 2005 | Children (6 mths–18 yrs; <7 yrs, 54%) | 60.0/40.0 | Anti-tTG and/or AEA | Yes | 0.02% | Smirnova et al. [ |
| Chelyabinsk | 2004 | Children (0–18 yrs) | ND | AGA and/or anti-tTG and/or AEA | Yes | 0.02% | Turchina and Tabak [ |
| Sakha Republic (Yakutia) | 2008 | Children (6 mths–18 yrs) | 48.4/51.6 | Anti-tTG | Yes | 0.06% | Savvina et al. [ |
| Saint Petersburg | 1999–2002 | Children (6 mths–18 yrs) | 50.0/50.0 | Anti-tTG and/or AEA | Yes | 0.02% | Vasilkova [ |
| Sverdlovsk region | 2009 | Children (0–18 yrs) | ND | AGA and/or anti-tTG and/or AEA | Yes | 0.30% | Klimin et al. [ |
| Tomsk region | 2010 | Children (mean age 8.6 ± 0.6) | 50.5/49.5 | Anti-tTG and/or AEA | Yes | 0.05% | Yankina [ |
| Yakutsk | 2008 | Children (6 mths–17 yrs; <4 yrs, 8.7%; 5–7 yrs, 28.8%; 8–10 yrs, 25.0%; 11–14 yrs, 26.3%; 15–17 yrs, 11.2%) | 65.0/35.0 | Anti-tTG and/or AEA | Yes | 0.11% | Savvina et al. [ |
ND: not determined.
Figure 2Geographic distribution of incidence reports and prevalence studies on CD in Russia. Small circles indicate that the data were only obtained from the regional center. Rounded circles indicate that the data were collected from several locations within the region. See Tables 2 and 3 for the results of these studies.
Screening results of CD prevalence obtained from geographically distinct regions of Russia.
| Region | Year | Participants | Age group | Sex ratio (m%/f %) | Screening test | Number screened | Screen positive | Biopsy | Number biopsied | CD | Author |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Karelia region | 1997–2001 | Schoolchildren | Children (mean age 11.6 ± 6.7) | 49.5/51.5 | Anti-tTG | 1988 | 8 | Yes | 4 | 1 : 496 (0.20%) | Kondrashova et al. [ |
| Ryazan region | ND | Healthy blood donors | Adults | 69.9/30.1 | Anti-tTG | 1740 | 41 | Yes | 10 | 1 : 174 (0.57%) | Stroikova et al. [ |
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| Irkutsk region | 2011 | Specific risk | Children (6 mths–18 yrs) | 52.0/48.0 | Anti-tTG | 1441 | 390 | Yes | 60 | 1 : 18 (5.56%) | Reshetnik et al. [ |
| Adults | 33.4/66.6 | 1402 | 271 | Yes | 45 | 1 : 31 (3.32%) | |||||
| 2014 | Specific risk | Children (6 mths–18 yrs) | 51.9/48.1 | 1775 | 494 | Yes | 12 | 1 : 40 (2.50%) | Reshetnik et al. [ | ||
| Krasnodar region | 2010 | Specific risk | Children (6 mths–18 yrs) | 46.9/53.1 | Anti-tTG and/or AEA | 742 | 54 | Yes | 54 | 1 : 36.6 (2.73%) | Tlif et al. [ |
| Moscow | 2003–2007 | Specific risk | Adults | 19.8/80.2 | Anti-tTG | 363 | 58 | Yes | 58 | 1 : 6.2 (15.98%) | Gudkova et al. [ |
| 2012 | Specific risk | Adults (mean age 51.5 ± 16.4) | ND | 318 | 6 | Yes | 5 | 1 : 106 (0.94%) | Bykova et al. [ | ||
| Nizhny Novgorod region | 2008 | Specific risk | Adults | ND | Anti-tTG | 1045 | 251 | Yes | 311 | 1 : 7.6 (13.16%) | Repin et al. [ |
| Ryazan region | 2002–2006 | Specific risk | Children (6 mths–18 yrs) | 57.4/42.6 | Anti-tTG | 256 | 4 | Yes | 4 | 1 : 57 (1.75%) | Stroikova et al. [ |
Patients with symptoms suggestive of CD: malabsorption syndrome, chronic abdominal pain, cramping or distension, chronic or intermittent diarrhea, growth failure, iron-deficiency anemia, weight loss, chronic fatigue, short stature, recurrent aphthous stomatitis (mouth ulcers), dermatitis herpetiformis-type rash, atopic dermatitis, urticaria, vitiligo, bronchial asthma, and so forth.
Participants were recruited among patients from specialized gastrointestinal clinics.
Patients with symptoms suggestive of CD (chronic or intermittent diarrhea, failure to thrive, weight loss, stunted growth, delayed puberty, amenorrhea, iron-deficiency anemia, chronic abdominal pain, cramping or distension, chronic fatigue, recurrent aphthous stomatitis (mouth ulcers), dermatitis herpetiformis-like rash, and atopic dermatitis) and asymptomatic patients at increased risk for CD (type 1 diabetes mellitus, Down syndrome, autoimmune thyroid disease, and first-degree relatives with CD).
ND: not determined.