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Celiac disease in children.

Clinics and research in hepatology and gastroenterology
October 1, 2015
Hélène Garnier-Lengliné et al. (3 authors)
Journal ArticleReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to evaluate the effectiveness and clinical benefits of a gluten-free diet in managing celiac disease and preventing long-term complications.

Results Summary

The study found that a gluten-free diet leads to clinical remission within weeks and normalization of small bowel mucosa over months or years. It also helps prevent long-term complications like osteoporosis, autoimmune diseases, and cancers.

Population

Individuals with celiac disease, including symptomatic and pauci-symptomatic forms.

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

Several months to years

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (5)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
gluten-free diet
decrease
celiac disease
patients with celiac disease
-
remains the only effective treatment
#1
gluten-free diet
decrease
clinical symptoms
children with celiac disease
within a few weeks
causes clinical remission
#2
gluten-free diet
increase
small bowel mucosa
children with celiac disease
in several months or even years
normalization
#3
gluten-free diet
decrease
anti-transglutaminase antibodies
children with celiac disease
in several months or even years
negativity
#4
gluten-free diet
decrease
long-term complications of celiac disease
patients with celiac disease
-
useful to prevent
#5
Abstract

Celiac disease is an autoimmune enteropathy, triggered by ingestion of gluten in genetically predisposed individuals. Since the use of anti-transglutaminase and anti-endomysium antibodies in the early 1990s, two main groups of clinical presentation can be identified: patients with a symptomatic form of the disease, and patients with a pauci (a)-symptomatic form detected during the work-up of another autoimmune disease or due to a family history of celiac disease. The prevalence of both forms of the disease is currently estimated between 1/100 and 1/400. Classical form of the disease is characterized by occurrence of diarrhoea, failure to thrive, and abdominal bloating in young infants in the months following gluten introduction. Serological tests show high level of anti-transglutaminase and anti-endomysium antibodies. Until recently, the diagnosis required duodenal biopsies that show villous atrophy. HLA genotype can help for diagnosis: the absence of the HLA-DQ2 or DQ8 alleles has a high negative predictive value. European guidelines recently proposed to reconsider the need for systematic endoscopy in typical symptomatic forms with high level of anti-transglutaminase and positive anti-endomysium. These recommendations are being assessed now. Currently, the gluten-free diet remains the only effective treatment for celiac disease. Children with celiac disease have to exclude from their diet all products containing wheat, barley and rye. Gluten-free diet causes clinical remission within a few weeks, but normalization of the small bowel mucosa and negativity of anti-transglutaminase antibodies are obtained in several months or even years. Gluten-free diet is useful to obtain clinical assessment, but also to prevent long-term complications of celiac disease, mainly osteoporosis, other autoimmune diseases, decreased fertility and cancers.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AutoantibodiesBiomarkersCeliac DiseaseChildDiarrheaDiet, Gluten-FreeEuropean UnionFailure to ThriveFlatulenceHumansPractice Guidelines as TopicPrevalenceRisk AssessmentRisk FactorsTransglutaminases
Study Links
Quality Scores
Safety90
Efficacy85/10
Quality80/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations30
Citations/Year3.0
Relative Citation Ratio1.46
NIH Percentile64.2%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
Weight Score1.79
Normalized Score0.86
Related Supplements
Celiac disease in children. | Panacea Index