Is it time to screen for adult coeliac disease?
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to evaluate whether coeliac disease meets the criteria for mass screening and assess the effectiveness of a gluten-free diet in treating its associated morbidity and mortality.
Results Summary
The study found that a gluten-free diet is an effective treatment for coeliac disease, reducing morbidity and mortality, but highlighted challenges such as poor adherence and overestimation of disease burden that may limit the feasibility of mass screening.
Population
Adults with coeliac disease.
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
gluten-free diet | decrease | associated morbidity and mortality | patients with coeliac disease | - | effectively treated | #1 |
To meet the principles of screening as described by Wilson and Jungner a disease must be common, a significant health burden, detectable and treatable. The key lies in the early detection and alteration of the natural history of disease. Coeliac disease affects 1 in 100 people. Despite this patients frequently have delays in diagnosis or may remain undetected. There is an associated morbidity and mortality which can be effectively treated by simple means of a gluten-free diet. For these reasons coeliac disease has been suggested as appropriate for mass screening. However, there are caveats to this: a complex clinical spectrum, a natural history that is imperfectly understood, overestimation of morbidity and mortality, poor adherence to treatment, and costs of service provision may argue against the time being right for mass screening. This review article provides the most contemporary overview and reference base to allow any clinician to understand the benefits or limitations of a screening programme for adult coeliac disease.