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Burden of illness in screen-detected children with celiac disease and their families.

Journal of pediatric gastroenterology and nutrition
October 1, 2012
Sampsa Kinos et al. (9 authors)
Controlled Clinical TrialJournal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to assess the health and well-being effects of a 1-year gluten-free diet in children with celiac disease detected by screening and compare outcomes with symptom-detected children.

Results Summary

Screen-detected children with celiac disease experienced symptom alleviation, improved daily life, and high dietary adherence (71% strict diet), similar to symptom-detected children (84% strict diet). Both groups showed improved health and reduced parental concern.

Population

Children with celiac disease (screen-detected and symptom-detected) in at-risk groups.

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

1 year

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (13)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
gluten-free diet
neutral
health and well-being
nationwide cohort of children with celiac disease detected by screening in at-risk groups
-
effect of
#1
gluten-free diet
neutral
diet
screen-detected children
71% strict diet
adherence to
#2
gluten-free diet
neutral
diet
symptom-detected children
84% strict diet
adherence to
#3
gluten-free diet
neutral
diet
screen-detected children
80%
management of
#4
gluten-free diet
neutral
diet
symptom-detected children
80%
management of
#5
gluten-free diet
neutral
symptoms
screen-detected children
78%
alleviation of
#6
gluten-free diet
neutral
symptoms
symptom-detected children
86%
alleviation of
#7
gluten-free diet
neutral
daily life
screen-detected children
73%
improvement in
#8
gluten-free diet
neutral
daily life
symptom-detected children
69%
improvement in
#9
diagnosis
neutral
diagnosis
parents of screen-detected children
93%
satisfaction with
#10
diagnosis
neutral
diagnosis
parents of symptom-detected children
88%
satisfaction with
#11
treatment
increase
health
both groups of children
-
improved
#12
treatment
decrease
parental concern
both groups of children
-
reduced
#13
Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Because of a variable clinical picture, most children with celiac disease remain unrecognized without active serologic screening. Because, however, many patients are asymptomatic, the justification for screening remains unclear. We assessed health and well-being and the effect of a 1-year gluten-free diet in a nationwide cohort of children with celiac disease detected by screening in at-risk groups. METHODS: A total of 222 newly detected children received a validated questionnaire covering aspects of the burden caused by the undiagnosed celiac disease. After 1 year, adherence to the diet and difficulties attending this, attitudes toward and effects of disease and diet on daily life, and parents' satisfaction with the diagnosis were inquired about. The children's health and parents' concern for it were asked about at diagnosis and on treatment. The outcomes of screen-detected children were compared with those of children diagnosed on the basis of clinical symptoms. RESULTS: Forty-three screen-detected and 88 symptom-detected children responded. Also, 65% of the screen-detected patients experienced symptoms; these, however, being less troublesome and of shorter duration than in symptom-detected subjects. There were no differences between the groups in dietary adherence (71% vs 84% strict diet), management of the diet (80% vs 80%), alleviation of symptoms (78% vs 86%), and improvement in daily life (73% vs 69%), or in satisfaction with the diagnosis (93% vs 88%). Improved health and reduced parental concern were observed in both groups. CONCLUSIONS: Screen-detected children with celiac disease can attain satisfactory dietary adherence and benefit from treatment similarly to symptom-detected patients. The results support intensified screening for celiac disease in at-risk children.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
Activities of Daily LivingAdolescentAttitude to HealthCeliac DiseaseChildChild, PreschoolCohort StudiesCost of IllnessDiet, Gluten-FreeFemaleHealthHumansInfantMaleMass ScreeningParentsPatient CompliancePatient SatisfactionSurveys and Questionnaires
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy85/10
Quality75/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations46
Citations/Year3.5
Relative Citation Ratio1.87
NIH Percentile72.4%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
Weight Score1.46
Normalized Score0.69
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Burden of illness in screen-detected children with celiac di... | Panacea Index