| Literature DB >> 29160841 |
Carlo Catassi1, Armin Alaedini2, Christian Bojarski3, Bruno Bonaz4, Gerd Bouma5, Antonio Carroccio6, Gemma Castillejo7, Laura De Magistris8, Walburga Dieterich9, Diana Di Liberto10, Luca Elli11, Alessio Fasano12, Marios Hadjivassiliou13, Matthew Kurien14, Elena Lionetti15, Chris J Mulder16, Kamran Rostami17, Anna Sapone18, Katharina Scherf19, Detlef Schuppan20, Nick Trott21, Umberto Volta22, Victor Zevallos23, Yurdagül Zopf24, David S Sanders25.
Abstract
Gluten-related disorders have recently been reclassified with an emerging scientific literature supporting the concept of non-celiac gluten sensitivity (NCGS). New research has specifically addressed prevalence, immune mechanisms, the recognition of non-immunoglobulin E (non-IgE) wheat allergy and overlap of NCGS with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS)-type symptoms. This review article will provide clinicians with an update that directly impacts on the management of a subgroup of their IBS patients whose symptoms are triggered by wheat ingestion.Entities:
Keywords: amylase-trypsin inhibitors (ATIs); celiac disease; gluten sensitivity; gluten-free diet; gluten-related disorders; wheat allergy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29160841 PMCID: PMC5707740 DOI: 10.3390/nu9111268
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Prevalence studies of people avoiding gluten-based products.
| Author | Year of Publication | Country | Group | Sample Size | Avoidance of Gluten-Based Products | Known Previous Diagnosis of CD |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tanpowpong et al. [ | 2012 | New Zealand | Children-general population | 916 | 5% ( | 1% ( |
| Rubio-Tapia et al. [ | 2013 | USA | Age ≥ 6 years, National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 2009–2010 | 7798 | 0.63% ( | 0.1% ( |
| DiGiacomo et al. [ | 2013 | USA | NHANES | 7762 | 0.6% | |
| Aziz et al. [ | 2014 | UK | Adults-general population | 1002 | 3.7% ( | 0.8% ( |
| Lis et al. [ | 2014 | Australia | Adults-athletes | 910 | 41.2% ( | None |
| Volta et al. [ | 2014 | Italy | Adult and pediatric GI clinic population | 12,225 | 391 (3.2%) | Within same population 340 (2.8%) coeliac patients diagnosed |
| Golley et al. [ | 2015 | Australia | Adults-general population | 1184 | 10.6% ( | 1.2% ( |
| Mardini et al. [ | 2015 | USA | Age ≥ 6 years, NHANES | 14,701 | 0.9% ( | 0.1% ( |
| Van Gils T et al. [ | 2016 | The Netherlands | Adults-general population | 785 | 6.2% (49/785) | 0.25% (2/785) |
| Carroccio A et al. [ | 2017 | Italy | Age 14–18 | 548 | 2.9% (16/548) | 1.26% (7/555) |
Figure 1Potential triggers in wheat that may account for both intestinal and extra-intestinal symptoms.
Figure 2Wheat components.
Summary of studies examining the role of gluten and wheat in IBS.
| Lead Author | Country | Year | Patients | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wahnschaffe [ | Germany | 2001 | 102 IBS-D without CD | Stool frequency significantly improved in patients HLA DQ2/DQ8 + ve |
| Wahnschaffe [ | Germany | 2007 | 145 IBS-D without CD | HLA-DQ2 predicted response to GFD |
| Biesikierski [ | Australia | 2010 | 34 NCGWS | Significant reduction in symptoms in GFD group |
| Carroccio [ | Italy | 2012 | 920 patients with IBS | 70 patients wheat-sensitive and 206 food sensitivities |
| Vazquez-Roque [ | USA | 2012 | 45 patients with IBS-D | Increased intestinal permeability in patients receiving gluten |
| Vazquez-Roque [ | USA | 2013 | 45 patients with IBS-D | Reduction in stool frequency in patients on GFD |
| Biesikierski [ | Australia | 2013 | 37 NCGWS on GFD | Patients responded to reduction in FODMAPs during run-in but no difference between GFD and gluten-containing arms |
| Fritscher-Ravens [ | Germany | 2014 | 36 patients with food-sensitive IBS 13/36 GFD after positive wheat challenge in CLE | All patients improved significantly on the GFD for at least one year |
| Aziz [ | UK | 2015 | 40 patients with IBS-D | 70% had reduced symptomology with GFD for 6 weeks |
| Di Sabatino [ | Italy | 2015 | 59 self-reported NCGWS | 4 g of gluten per day for 1 week increased overall clinical symptoms compared with placebo in ( |
| Shahbazkhani [ | Iran | 2015 | 72 patients with IBS (Based on Rome III criteria) | Worsening of intestinal symptoms with gluten compared to placebo |
| Zanini [ | Italy | 2015 | 35 NCGWS on a GFD | Given either and containing or gluten-free flour. 34% symptomatic with gluten-containing flour, 49% symptomatic with gluten-free flour, 17% no response |
| Zanwar [ | India | 2016 | 60 patients with IBS (Based on Rome III criteria) | GFD for 4 weeks. Significant reduction in visual analogue scales (VAS) of symptomology |
| Elli [ | Italy | 2016 | 140 patients enrolled | 14% of patients shown to have symptomatic response to gluten on repeat challenge |
| Barmeyer [ | Germany | 2017 | 34 patients with IBS | 34% responded to a GFD and continued on a GFD at 1 year |
Figure 3IBS treatment pathway.