Coeliac disease
Appearance
Gluten-sensitive enteropathy
Pathogenesis:
[edit | edit source]- Autoimmune disorder triggered by gluten in genetically-predisposed individuals
Clinical manifestations
[edit | edit source]- Classic symptoms related to malabsorption:
- Diarrhoea
- Steatorrhoea
- Weight loss
- Nutrient or vitamin deficiencies
- Majority have only minor GIT complaints
- Associated conditions:
- Dermatitis herpetiformis (grouped intensely pruritic papules and vesicles, mostly on elbows, dorsal forearms, knees, scalp, back and buttocks)
- Atrophic glossitis
- Metabolic bone disease
- Iron deficiency anaemia (UTD says coeliac disease is found in up to 10% of patients presenting for investigation of IDA)
- Selective IgA deficiency
- Other conditions with autoimmune components
- Increased risk for lymphoma and GIT cancer (unclear if the incidence of cancer is affected by good management of coeliac disease)
- Dermatitis herpetiformis (grouped intensely pruritic papules and vesicles, mostly on elbows, dorsal forearms, knees, scalp, back and buttocks)
Risk factors:
[edit | edit source]- First and second degree relative with confirmed coeliac disease
- T1DM
- Autoimmune thyroiditis
- Down and Turner syndromes
- Pulmonary haemosiderosis
Investigation:
[edit | edit source]- Serologic tests
- Tissue transglutaminase-IgA is the single preferred test
- Serum tissue transglutaminase IgA and endomysial IgA have similar sensitivities
- Sensitivity depends on severity of disease
- Tests may become negative within weeks of adherence to gluten-free diet
- Positive serology generally mandates a small bowel biopsy to confirm diagnosis
- Serologic tests can give a false negative in: IgA deficiency, gluten-free diet, and mild disease
- Gastroscopy with small bowel biopsy
- Look for:
- Atrophic appearing mucosa with loss of folds
- Visible fissures
- Nodularity
- Scalloping
- Prominent submucosal vascularity
- However, endoscopic visual features alone have a low sensitivity (60-90%)
- Features can also be seen with giardiasis, autoimmune enteropathy, and HIV infection
- Biopsy:
- At least four biopsies of post-bulbar duodenum
- Some advocate for bulb biopsies too, but these are probably not necessary, and if taken should be sent separately and labelled as such to avoid the false-positive finding of villous atrophy on those samples
- I don't THINK it makes a difference whether they are on gluten for that part
- Look for:
Diagnosis
[edit | edit source]- Diagnostic criteria:
- Duodenal biopsy samples showing increased intraepithelial lymphocytes with crypt hyperplasia or also with villous atrophy, in a patient with positive coeliac serology
- Patients on a gluten-containing diet:
- Low disease probability (absence of symptoms or signs of malabsorption such as chronic diarrhoea/steatorrhoea or weight loss; absence of family history; chinese, japanese or sub-saharan african descent)
- Serologic testing
- Negative test for an individual with low risk of coeliac disease has a high negative predictive value and obviates the need for small bowel biopsy
- If positive, gastroscopy with small bowel biopsy
- Serologic testing
- High disease probability (clinical presentation highly suggestive for coeliac disease, such as chronic diarrhoea/steatorrhoea with weight loss; both risk factors and consistent symptoms/signs)
- Both serologic testing and small bowel biopsy
- Low disease probability (absence of symptoms or signs of malabsorption such as chronic diarrhoea/steatorrhoea or weight loss; absence of family history; chinese, japanese or sub-saharan african descent)
- Patients on a gluten-free diet
- Do serologic testing anyway
- If negative, do HLA-DQ2/DQ8 testing
- If negative coeliac disease excluding
- If positive, give them gluten for 8 weeks then repeat serology and small bowel biopsy
- Positive serology and nondiagnostic biopsies:
- False-positive tTg - see UTD
- False-negative biopsy - can have a patchy distribution or initially be confined to duodenal bulb
- Can do further tests like HLA-DQ2/DQ8 genotyping - would refer to gastro, I guess
- Negative serology and abnormal small bowel biopsy
- Genetic testing
- If positive, gluten free diet for 12-24 months and monitor clinical response