| Literature DB >> 35399440 |
Gabriela V Flores Monar1, Hamza Islam2, Sri Madhurima Puttagunta3, Rabia Islam2, Sumana Kundu4, Surajkumar B Jha5, Ana P Rivera6, Ibrahim Sange7.
Abstract
Type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) and celiac disease (CD) are one of the most recognized related autoimmune disorders as they share a common genetic background that has been found in the HLA genotype, more specifically DQ2 and DQ8 molecules. Studies have shown that environmental factors as early or late exposure to cereals in the first months of life or the acquired viral infections have been implicated in the risk of development of autoantigens. CD, in most cases, is asymptomatic; therefore, it goes underdiagnosed. As a result, it has been linked to late consequences as decreased growth, delayed puberty, and anemia. Also, CD has been considered an independent risk factor for nephropathy and retinopathy. Therefore, in T1DM patients, as high-risk individuals, a CD screening has been recommended, especially to analyze their joint management. A gluten-free diet has been studied and linked to possible benefits in glycemic control or decreasing the hypoglycemic episodes in T1DM and preventing in CD the late bowel mucosal damage as gluten has been well documented as the primary trigger of these autoimmune responses. This article has reviewed the concurrent occurrence of T1DM and CD regarding the pathogenesis, clinical overlaps, screening, and management options.Entities:
Keywords: celiac disease; gluten; hla; tissue-transglutaminase antibodies; type 1 diabetes mellitus
Year: 2022 PMID: 35399440 PMCID: PMC8986520 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.22912
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Summary of mentioned articles about shared genetic background and environmental factors in T1DM and CD
T1DM, type 1 diabetes mellitus; CD, celiac disease; HR, hazard ratio; OR, odds ratio; HLA, human leukocyte antigen; US, United States; IA, islet autoimmunity
| Author | Year | Design | Population | Global Sample | Results | Conclusions |
| Siddiqui et al. [ | 2021 | Cross-sectional | Pediatric samples from the Isra University Hospital, Liaquat University of Medical and Health Sciences Hospital and Asian Institute of Medical Sciences Hospital, Hyderabad, India | 175 pediatric individuals with T1DM or CD | In patients with CD, DQ2 was found in 85.7%, DQ8 in 11.4%, and DQ2/DQ8 at the same time in 2.8%. In the group of concurrent CD and T1DM, DQ2 was found in 31.4%, CD8 in 25%, and DQ2/DQ8 in 34% and just nine of these individuals were experimenting CD | The most frequent haplotypes present in these population were DQ2 and DQ8 coming after and they could be used for a more accurate diagnosis in selected cases |
| Farina et al. [ | 2019 | Children enrolled in a Hospital of Naples, Italy | 21 patients with T1DM | DR3-DQA1*05 and DQB1*02 alleles encode for DQ2 molecule and DR4-HLA DQA1*03 and DQB1*03 alleles encode DQ8 molecules | DQ2.5 and DQ8 risk alleles are more frequent than non-associated alleles in T1DM patients | |
| Frederiksen et al. [ | 2013 | Longitudinal, observational study | Newborns at St. Joseph’s Hospital in Denver, Colorado | 1,835 children at risk for T1DM | Early exposure to any solid food (HR: 1.91. 95%. CI: 1.04-3.51) and late first exposure (HR: 3.02; 95% CI: 1.26-7.24) predict risk of development of T1DM | There is a period of time, between four and six months, to introduce solid foods without increasing the IA risks. The risk of developing IA was reduced when gluten was introduced while breastfeeding |
| Ivarsson et al. [ | 2002 | Prospective study | Swedish children | 524 children | The risk to develop CD was reduced if a child is being breastfed when gluten is introduced in its diet (OR: 0.59; 95% CI: 0.42-0.83) | Reduced development of CD in children under two years old who were breastfed while the gluten was introduced and probably also reduced risk of development in the next childhood phase |
| Norris et al. [ | 2003 | Birth cohort study | Newborns at St Joseph's Hospital in Denver, Colorado | 1,183 children at increased type 1 DM risk | Children who were exposed to cereal in the first three months of age (HR: 4.32; 95% CI: 2.0-9.35) and the ones who were exposed after six months (HR: 5.36; 95% CI: 2.08-13.8) had an increased risk of IA | The risk of IA increases if exposure to cereals is outside a window of time between four and six months of age |
| Lönnrot et al. [ | 2017 | Prospective international cohort study | Children enrolled in six clinical research centers: three in the US (Colorado, Georgia/Florida, and Washington State) and three in Europe (Finland, Germany, and Sweden) | 8,676 children | The risk of IA was associated with the number of respiratory infections given in a nine-month frame of time (p < 0.001). The hazard of IA increased approximately 5.6% for every one per year rate increase in infections from the respiratory tract | Respiratory infections occurring in young children were associated with the subsequent risk of autoimmunity |
Summary of mentioned articles about clinical implications of T1DM and CD and impact on the quality of life
T1DM, type 1 diabetes mellitus; CD, celiac disease; BPCD, biopsy-proven celiac disease; anti-tTG, anti-tissue transglutaminase antibodies; US, United States; HbA1c, hemoglobin A1c; GFD, gluten-free diet
| Author | Year | Design | Population | Global Sample | Results | Conclusions |
| Abid et al. [ | 2011 | Longitudinal study | T1DM children in the Royal Belfast Hospital for Sick Children in United Kingdom | 468 children with T1DM | Mean age at T1DM diagnosis was 6.8 years and CD diagnosis 11.1 years. The majority (10 out of 11) had improvement in their gastrointestinal symptoms and six out of eight did not present more high-risk hypoglycemic episodes. However, the daily insulin requirement went up, from 0.88 to 1.1 unit/kg/day | A GFD improved the gastrointestinal symptoms and decreased episodes of severe hypoglycemia but the insulin requirement increased |
| Craig et al. [ | 2017 | Youth with T1DM in three continents: US, Australia, and Europe (more specifically United Kingdom, Germany, and Austria) | 52,721 individuals <18 years of age | BPCD was evidenced in 1,835 individuals, which represent 3.5% and the median age at diagnosis was 8.1 years (5.3-11.2 years). CD was diagnosed less than a year after T1DM diagnosis in 35%, between one and two years in 18%, between three and five years in 23%, and more than five years in 17%. The prevalence of CD went from 1.9% in US data to 7.7% in Australia and was higher in females than males (4.3% vs 2.7%). | T1DM individuals with coexisting CD were younger at the diagnosis than the ones with T1DM alone. HbA1c did not show any significant difference but height standard deviation score was lower in those with concomitant CD; therefore, a follow-up is recommended. | |
| Rohrer et al. [ | 2015 | Patients with T1DM from the German-Austrian DPV Database | 56,514 individuals with T1DM less than 20-year duration | Nephropathy analyzed as microalbuminuria presented almost 10 years earlier in patients with CD versus non-CD: 32.8 years (29.7-42.5) vs. 42.4 years (41.4-43.3), and retinopathy in 25% of patients presented at 26.7 years (23.7-30.2) in CD patients versus 33.7 in non-CD patients | The presence of CD in a T1DM patient represents an independent risk factor for nephropathy and retinopathy, so in consequence the study recommends serologic tests of CD even in asymptomatic T1DM patients | |
| Tittel et al. [ | 2021 | Children and young adults from the German-Austrian DPV Database | 79,067 children, adolescents, and young adults | In T1DM + depression, HbA1c was higher (9.0% [8.9-9.0]). in CD + T1D + depression (8.9% [8.6-9.2]), compared with T1D only (8.2% [8.2-8.2]). Also, anxiety, schizophrenia, and eating disorders are more frequently found in the T1D + CD + depression group compared with T1D group (p < 0.001). | Depression is significantly more frequent in T1DM with concomitant CD patients, also along with a higher HbA1c and anxiety and eating disorders compared to the T1DM group only. Thus, a screening for depression is recommended as routine as well to improve results and quality of life in those patients | |
| Bhadada et al. [ | 2017 | Retrospective study | Patients under 20 years old from Chandigarh, India | 109 patients with T1DM under 20 years old | The age at diagnosis of CD and the time frame between the diagnosis of T1DM and CD were 11.5 ± 4.6 versus 13.8 ± 3.4 years and 48.8 ± 43.3 versus 20.2 ± 31.8 months in groups of CD alone and CD plus T1DM, respectively. Short stature (87% vs. 40.9%), anemia (80.9% vs. 45%), and delayed puberty (61.9% vs. 29.4%) were more frequent in CD alone group. | Patients with CD alone had a more delayed diagnosis than the ones with concurrent CD and T1DM and consequently to its late diagnosis, it led to more incidence of anemia, short stature, and delayed puberty |
Summary of mentioned articles about screening, diagnosis, and joint management of T1DM and CD
T1DM, type 1 diabetes mellitus; CD, celiac disease; BPCD, biopsy-proven celiac disease; anti-tTG, anti-tissue transglutaminase antibodies; HR, hazard ratio; US, United States; HbA1c, hemoglobin A1c; CI, confidence interval; GFD, gluten-free diet
| Author | Year | Design | Population | Global Sample | Results | Conclusions |
| Vajravelu et al. [ | 2018 | Cohort Study | Individuals from United Kingdom primary care database | 9,180 patients diagnosed with T1DM between one and 35 years old with no previous diagnosis of CD | CD was diagnosed in 196 T1DM patients (2%) during the study. A younger age at T1DM at diagnosis (HR 0.91 [95% CI 0.88-0.94]) and female sex (HR 3.19 [95% CI 1.39-7.34]) were associated with an increased risk of CD. | The greater risk of developing CD was found in those who were diagnosed of T1DM at a younger age and in the female sex. Even though CD could develop in any age after T1DM, CD screening should be done in childhood and adulthood |
| Paul et al. [ | 2018 | Prospective study | Children and adolescents at the Bristol Royal Hospital in England | 2,035 children and adolescents with T1DM | 157 T1DM children with no clinical symptoms were diagnosed with CD. 53.5% had anti-tTG >10× ULN (normal <10 IU/mL) and 89% were from high-risk groups; all of this percentage had a positive histological evidence of small bowel enteropathy | In children and adolescents, the levels of anti-tTG could be used as a noninvasive diagnostic method |
| Laitinen et al. [ | 2017 | Cohort study | Children and adolescents at the Tampere University Hospital, Finland | 520 children and adolescents between 0 and 17 years | Children from the screening had less decreased growth (p = 0.016) and symptomatology (p < 0.001) at diagnosis than the children that were tested after they had symptoms. | In the serological CD screening group, the patients were less affected by clinical symptoms and decreased growth than the ones diagnosed after clinical suspicions. Also, both groups showed signs of malabsorption and similar advanced intestine mucosal damage. Therefore, a screening for celiac disease should be done in every patient with T1DM. |
| Unal et al. [ | 2021 | Retrospective study | T1DM at the University of Health Sciences in Turkey | 779 T1DM patients | The majority of CD cases (76.1%) were found at the diagnosis of T1DM and (21.7%) in the first five years, making together the 97.8% of cases diagnosed in the first five years of T1DM diagnosis; and the rest of the cases (2.2%) in the following years. However, the percentage of BPCD were just 6.9% at the time of the diagnosis. Additionally, in 23.3% cases, the positive autoantibodies spontaneously normalized without a GFD. | A serological test for diagnosis and follow-up is recommended, instead of biopsy-required diagnosis of CD. Also, not initiating an immediate GFD therapy is suggested, especially in asymptomatic patients or with a mild value of autoantibodies test because it adds an additional burden in the diagnosed children and their families. |
| Kaur et al. [ | 2019 | Randomized controlled trial | Patients with T1DM from India | 320 patients with T1DM | The number of hypoglycemic episodes per month declined in the patients under a GFD (3.5 episodes at the beginning of the study versus 2.3 episodes at the sixth month). Also, the HbA1c was reduced by 0.73% in the GFD patients and elevated in 0.99% in the normal diet. | In patients with T1DM and CD, following a GFD could decrease the hypoglycemic episodes and could lead to an improved glycemic control. |