4.7 Review

Food Safety and Cross-Contamination of Gluten-Free Products: A Narrative Review

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 13, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu13072244

Keywords

celiac disease; gluten cross-contaminations; dietary adherence; gluten-free diet; vital gluten; oat; hidden gluten

Funding

  1. Ministry of Economy, Knowledge, Business and University [RTC-2016-5441-1]

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A gluten-free diet is currently the only effective treatment for celiac disease, but it is difficult for patients to maintain this diet for life. Commercial immunochemical assays are used to detect gluten, but the lack of official reference materials may lead to systematic deviations in the quantitation results.
A gluten-free diet (GFD) is currently the only effective treatment for celiac disease (CD); an individual's daily intake of gluten should not exceed 10 mg. However, it is difficult to maintain a strict oral diet for life and at least one-third of patients with CD are exposed to gluten, despite their best efforts at dietary modifications. It has been demonstrated that both natural and certified gluten-free foods can be heavily contaminated with gluten well above the commonly accepted threshold of 20 mg/kg. Moreover, meals from food services such as restaurants, workplaces, and schools remain a significant risk for inadvertent gluten exposure. Other possible sources of gluten are non-certified oat products, numerous composite foods, medications, and cosmetics that unexpectedly contain hidden vital gluten, a proteinaceous by-product of wheat starch production. A number of immunochemical assays are commercially available worldwide to detect gluten. Each method has specific features, such as format, sample extraction buffers, extraction time and temperature, characteristics of the antibodies, recognition epitope, and the reference material used for calibration. Due to these differences and a lack of official reference material, the results of gluten quantitation may deviate systematically. In conclusion, incorrect gluten quantitation, improper product labeling, and poor consumer awareness, which results in the inadvertent intake of relatively high amounts of gluten, can be factors that compromise the health of patients with CD.

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