Coeliac disease
- the lining of the small bowel is damaged due to a protein gluten.
- Gluten is found in grains such as wheat, barley, triticale and rye.
- Proteins very similar to gluten are found in oats and may also cause coeliac disease.
- Can develop at any age
- Affects both adults and children Any age, median age of diagnosis is 40 years
- Older patients over age 60 years represent 20% of cases
- May present as Failure to Thrive in infants
- Positive family history strong predictive value
- Prevalence: 1 per 120-300
- More common in white patients and rare in Asian patients – Coeliac disease should not be excluded on the basis of a patient’s ethnicity or appearance
- Some patients have minimal or no obvious symptoms, or only extra‑intestinal issues
- One-third of patients with coeliac disease are overweight or obese at diagnosis
- More common in women (75% of adult cases)
- Family History increases risk
- Monozygotic twins: 75% concordance rate
- First degree relatives: 10% have Celiac Disease
- Second degree relatives: 3-6% have Celiac Disease
Pathophysiology
- Small Bowel exposure to Antigens in cereal grains (rye, wheat, barley)
- Immunologic disorder of Small Bowel
- Abnormal T Cell and IgA and IgG Antibody response
- Enhanced immunogenic response to gliadin (Alcohol-soluble portion of gluten) at lamina propria
- Results in intense local inflammation at villous resulting in villous atrophy
- Significantly decreases absorptive surface
- Related to HLA Class II DQA1*0501 and DQB1*0201 (HLA-DQ2 and HLA-DQ8)
- Associated with other Autoimmune Conditions
- Chromosomal abnormality
- Turner’s Syndrome (6%)
- Down Syndrome (8%)
- Williams Syndrome (8%)
- Autoimmune Conditions
- Type I Diabetes Mellitus (2-8% comorbidity)
- Autoimmune Thyroid disease (3%)
- Dermatitis Herpetiformis
- Sjogren’s Syndrome
- Primary biliary Cirrhosis
- Addison’s Disease
- Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
- Selective IgA Deficiency (2-8%)
- Alopecia Areata
- Autoimmune Hepatitis
- Sarcoidosis
- Vitiligo
- Psoriasis
- Chromosomal abnormality
- Associated with other Autoimmune Conditions
Presentation
- Fatigue/Lethargy
- Diarrhoea/ Loose bowel motions
- Weight Loss
- Thinned hair
- Borderline ↓ BMI/ weight loss
- Mild anemia
- Oligomenorrhoea
- Abdo pain, bloating
- Less typical – lethargy, headaches, osteoporosis, iron deficiency, transaminase elevation, infertility, other autoimmune disease, dermatitis herpetiformis
Diagnosis/ Investigations
When to test for coeliac disease
- Offer serological testing for coeliac disease to people with any of the following:
- Persistent unexplained abdominal or gastrointestinal symptoms
- Faltering growth
- Prolonged fatigue
- Unexpected weight loss
- Severe or persistent mouth ulcers
- Unexplained iron, vitamin B12 or folate deficiency
- Type 1 diabetes, at diagnosis
- Autoimmune thyroid disease, at diagnosis
- Irritable bowel syndrome (in adults)
- First-degree relatives of people with coeliac disease
- Consider serological testing for coeliac disease in people with any of the following:
- Metabolic bone disorder (reduced bone mineral density or osteomalacia)
- Unexplained neurological symptoms (particularly peripheral neuropathy or ataxia
- Unexplained subfertility or recurrent miscarriage
- Persistently raised liver enzymes with unknown cause
- Dental enamel defects
- Down syndrome
- Turner syndrome
- Coeliac serology
- Total immunoglobulin A (IgA)
- transglutaminase (tTG-IgA) antibody – has lower sensitivity in children under three years of age
- anti-deamidated gliadin peptide (DGP-IgG) antibody
Option 1:
tTG-IgA + DGP-IgG
Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS) item number 71164
double antibody test ($39.90) is the preferred one-step approach.
Or
Option 2:
tTG-IgA + Total IgA level
If the IgA level is low 🡪 preform DGP-IgG
MBS item number 71163, single antibody test ($24.75).
- both test tTG-IgA and DPG-IgG have >85% sensitivity and >90% specificity
- false negative rate of 10–15% – Not valid if on gluten free diet or taking immune suppressants
- Positive coeliac disease serology in isolation is insufficient for the diagnosis of coeliac disease.
- The higher the titre of serology, the greater the positive predictive value for coeliac disease.
- In patients with risk factors for coeliac disease, negative coeliac disease serology has lower negative predictive value, so further work-up should be considered.15
- Patients with persistently positive coeliac disease serology but normal small intestinal histology may have ‘potential’ (or ‘latent’) coeliac disease, and follow-up is recommended.
Confirmation
1) Gastroscopy with small bowel biopsies
- Gold standard for diagnosing celiac disease.
- Important to perform while the patient is on a gluten-containing diet to avoid false negatives
- causes patchy involvement of the proximal small intestine,
- multiple biopsies are recommended (eg two from the first and four from the second part of the duodenum)
- microscopic findings
- Raised intra-epithelial lymphocytes
- crypt hyperplasia
- villous atrophy
False positive: Other causes to consider
- Giardia
- common variable immunodeficiency
- Crohn’s disease
- tropical sprue
- autoimmune enteropathy
- cow’s milk protein intolerance
- medications (eg olmesartan).
False negative: Gluten Free Diet (GFD) or immunosuppression can obscure changes of villous atrophy.
If unable to follow gluten containing diet prior to gastroscopy: HLA DQ2/8 genotyping
2) Human leukocyte antigen DQ2/8 genotyping
- The absence of HLA susceptibility means that coeliac disease is unlikely and further investigations can focus on other diagnoses (likelihood of coeliac disease <1%).
- The presence of HLA susceptibility genes is not diagnostic of coeliac disease, so NEED Gluten challenge for definitive diagnosis
- HLA typing is expensive (Medicare Benefits Schedule item number 71151; $118.85), so it is important to use it prudently
- HLA typing is a ‘once only’ test as a person’s genotype does not change.
- HLA typing results are not adversely affected by a GFD
- HLA DQ2/8 Used in specific situations
- When coeliac disease serology and/or small bowel examination is inconclusive or equivocal
- When there has been failure to improve on a gluten-free diet
- When a person has commenced a gluten-free diet prior to assessment by serology or small bowel examination
- unwilling or unable to undertake a gluten challenge prior to investigation
- In patients clinically assessed to be at higher risk of coeliac disease in order to exclude those where further testing for coeliac disease is not required
- Joint BSPGHAN and Celiac UK guidelines (2013) suggest that positive serological tests with positive HLA typing and typical symptoms can confirm diagnosis without a biopsy.
- Gluten free diet induced symptom resolution, normalised serology, mucosal healing
- If been on a gluten free diet – consider doing a challenge and doing ensodpy after 6 weeks (onset of symptoms not sufficient, may jsut be FODMAP effect)
Gluten-sensitive or wheat‑sensitive patients
- Many Australians adopt a GFD(gluten free diet) without assessment for coeliac disease.
- This poses a diagnostic dilemma as coeliac disease serology and intestinal histology can become falsely negative if the patient has been on a GFD for more than a few months.
- Many Australians remove gluten from their diet because they feel it helps improve gastrointestinal or other symptoms.
- For these people, a definitive diagnosis is desirable as:
- a formal diagnosis of coeliac disease will ensure strict treatment and follow-up of a serious medical illness
- many people who self-report ‘gluten sensitivity’ are not actually sensitive to gluten. These patients, instead of excluding gluten, may benefit more from excluding other symptom-inducing wheat components, such as fermentable carbohydrates (FODMAPs)
- There are two diagnostic approaches –
- option 1 : HLA-DQ2/8 genotyping
- Option 2: Gluten challenge, then testing
- Approximately 3–6 g of gluten consumed daily for two weeks will cause intestinal changes of coeliac disease in 50–70% of affected adults, with the development of positive serology after four weeks in 10–55%.
- To optimise the diagnostic yield, patients should be encouraged to return to consuming 3–6 g or more of gluten each day for, ideally, six or more weeks.
- This daily amount of gluten can be found in two to four slices of wheat bread, two to four Weet-Bix or 0.5–1 cup of cooked pasta.
Paediatric population
- The tTG assay has lower sensitivity in children under three years of age.
- Ensure DGP-IgG testing is performed alongside tTG-IgA to overcome this issue.
- Children with coeliac disease may present with more ‘classical’ complaints than adults
- high-titre tTG is strongly predictive of coeliac disease in children, suggest small intestinal biopsies can be avoided if children meet the following criteria
- Characteristic symptoms
- TTG X 10 ULN
- Positive endomysial antibody
- Positive HLA susceptibility
Screening
- Worthwhile screening first degree relative for HLA DQ2/8 – if negative no further required
- (risk in first degree relative is 1/10)
- If asymptomatic gene – could consider screening 2-3 years during childhood
Management
- Education
- Gluten free diet + dietician referral
- Refer to coeliac support group
- Explain that family members will need to be screened with coeliac Ab testing
Ongoing review/ follow up
- Symptom control
- Check response to a gluten-free diet:
- check antibody concentrations
- Ab should start to fall by 3–6 months but can remain elevated (even despite adequate dietary adherence)
- check adherence
- persistently elevated antibodies or ongoing gastrointestinal symptoms should prompt referral to a dietitian for assessment of adherence and reinforcement of advice
- Repeat blood tests (q6-12 months):
- Coeliac Ab (tTG, DGP, total IgA)
- frequently used as a surrogate marker of intestinal healing
- titres generally normalise on a GFD in 12 months
- persistently positive titres suggest ongoing gluten exposure
- TSH & T4
- F/u on any micronutrient deficiencies
- Look for evidence of malabsorption – FBC, E/LFT, TFT, IS, Ca, Phos, Fasting/random glucose, zinc, Mg
- Repeat gastroscopy at 18-24months to review for healing & repeat biopsy
- BMD every 2 yrs
- Encourage membership with Coeliac society
Complications
- Increased Risk of Malignancies:
- Lymphomas: Higher risk, especially Non-Hodgkin lymphoma.
- Small Bowel Adenocarcinomas: Increased risk over time.
- Reproductive Issues:
- Pregnant Women: Higher risk of miscarriage and congenital birth defects.
- Infertility
- Growth and Development:
- Children: Short stature and failure to thrive.
- Nutrient Malabsorption:
- Osteopenia: Due to calcium deficiency.
- Bleeding Diathesis: Due to vitamin K deficiency.
- Anemia: Due to iron, folate, or vitamin B12 deficiency.
- Lack of Exercise Endurance: Due to overall poor nutrition.
- Seizures: Due to nutrient deficiencies.
Screen and treat nutrient deficiencies and other complications:
- Iron
- B12
- vitamin D
- calcium and folate
- bone mineral density
- screen for other associated conditions if clinically relevant
- type 1 diabetes
- autoimmune thyroid disease
- liver function
- review immunisation status
- particularly consider pneumococcal vaccination as infection with this organism is higher in patients with coeliac disease, probably secondary to functional hyposplenism
- screen first-degree relatives
Pearls and Other Issues
- Untreated Celiac Disease: Leads to chronic ill health and complications.
- Common Issues: Secondary lactose intolerance, increased risk of osteoporosis, epilepsy, infections, bowel cancer, and jejunal lymphoma.
- Calcium Deficiency: Affects dentition.
- Autoimmune Screening: Recommend screening for type 1 diabetes and thyroid function problems due to common genetic background.