| Literature DB >> 30453686 |
Alice Itzlinger1, Federica Branchi2, Luca Elli3, Michael Schumann4.
Abstract
The gluten-free diet is the only effective treatment available for celiac disease. However, it is difficult to adhere to and a closer look on the diet's implementation and indications reveals several ambiguities: Not only is there controversy on the threshold of gluten that can be tolerated in the frame of a strict gluten-free diet, but it is also unclear whether the gluten-free diet is an appropriate treatment in patient subgroups with asymptomatic or potential celiac disease. Reports from a number of research groups suggest that a certain proportion of patients may effectively develop tolerance to gluten and thus become suitable for gluten reintroduction over time. In this review, we set out to create an overview about the current state of research as regards the definition of a strict gluten-free diet in terms of the gluten thresholds considered tolerable and the indication for a gluten-free diet in the absence of histological abnormalities or symptoms. Furthermore, we discuss the concept that a gluten-free diet must be followed for life by all patients.Entities:
Keywords: adherence; gluten; mucosal recovery; serology; threshold; villous atrophy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30453686 PMCID: PMC6267495 DOI: 10.3390/nu10111796
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
The spectrum of clinical presentations of celiac disease.
| Clinical Features | Celiac Disease | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
| |
| Malabsorption syndrome | + | − | − | − |
| Gastrointestinal symptoms | +/− | +/− | − | − |
| Extraintestinal manifestations | +/− | +/− | − | − |
| Serology (tTG/EMA) | + | + | + | + |
| Histological alterations (Marsh) | + | + | + | − |
tTG, anti-transglutaminase antibodies; EMA, anti-endomysial antibodies.
Relevant original studies evaluating the safe daily gluten threshold for celiac disease patients (adapted from Akobeng et al. [17]). CD: celiac disease; GFD: gluten-free diet; IEL: intraepithelial lymphocytosis; RCT: Randomized Controlled Trial.
| Study | Methods | Participants | Diet | Aim of the Study | Results/Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Catassi 2007 [ | RCT from Italy | 39 adults with CD on GFD for >2 years | 90 days, 50 mg gluten/day ( 10 mg gluten/day ( 50 mg placebo/day ( | To evaluate the safe threshold of ingestion of contaminating gluten | Ingestion of contaminating gluten should be lower than 50 mg/day |
| Collin 2004 [ | Cross-sectional study from Finland | 76 adults, 16 children with CD on GFD for 1–10 years | Median 2 years naturally GFD ( wheat starch-based GFD ( | To establish a limit for residual gluten in gluten-free products | Threshold should be lower than 100 mg/day |
| Peräaho 2003 [ | RCT from Finland | 57 adults with newly diagnosed, untreated CD | 1 year wheat-starch-based-GFD ( natural GFD ( | To evaluate the difference between a wheat starch-based GFD and natural GFD | No histological/clinical differences between the two groups |
| Lohiniemi 2000 [ | Cross-sectional study from Finland | 58 adults with CD, 110 healthy controls | Patients on wheat starch-based GFD | To evaluate the effect of wheat-starch based GFD on clinical symptoms | Wheat starch-based gluten-free products are suitable for CD patients |
| Selby 1999 [ | Cross-sectional study from Australia | 89 adults with CD |
Codex GFD (<500 ppm) ( GFD < 30 mg ( | To evaluate the effect of gluten traces in GFD | No histological differences between the groups |
| Catassi 1993 [ | Randomized controlled trial from Italy | 20 children with CD on GFD | 4 weeks 100 mg gliadin/day ≈ 200 mg gluten/day ( 500 mg gliadin/day ≈ 1 g gluten/day ( | To evaluate the effects of chronic ingestion of gliadin | Histological deterioration and increase in IEL count in both groups, clinical relapse in 30% of 1 g-group |
Figure 1Rational approach to patients with potential CD.