4.7 Article

Monitoring of gluten-free diet compliance in celiac patients by assessment of gliadin 33-mer equivalent epitopes in feces

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NUTRITION
Volume 95, Issue 3, Pages 670-677

Publisher

AMER SOC NUTRITION-ASN
DOI: 10.3945/ajcn.111.026708

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion [IPT-010000-2010-026]
  2. Corporacion Tecnologica de Andalucia
  3. Agencia de Innovacion y Desarrollo de Andalucia
  4. Ministerio de Educacion
  5. Junta de Andalucia [AGR-4783]
  6. Obra Social Caja Burgos
  7. Junta de Castilla y Leon, Consejeria de Sanidad [318/A/08]

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Background: Certain immunotoxic peptides from gluten are resistant to gastrointestinal digestion and can interact with celiac-patient factors to trigger an immunologic response. A gluten-free diet (GFD) is the only effective treatment for celiac disease (CD), and its compliance should be monitored to avoid cumulative damage. However, practical methods to monitor diet compliance and to detect the origin of an outbreak of celiac clinical symptoms are not available. Objective: We assessed the capacity to determine the gluten ingestion and monitor GFD compliance in celiac patients by the detection of gluten and gliadin 33-mer equivalent peptidic epitopes (33EPs) in human feces. Design: Fecal samples were obtained from healthy subjects, celiac patients, and subjects with other intestinal pathologies with different diet conditions. Gluten and 33EPs were analyzed by using immunochromatography and competitive ELISA with a highly sensitive antigliadin 33-mer monoclonal antibody. Results: The resistance of a significant part of 33EPs to gastrointestinal digestion was shown in vitro and in vivo. We were able to detect gluten peptides in feces of healthy individuals after consumption of a normal gluten-containing diet, after consumption of a GFD combined with controlled ingestion of a fixed amount of gluten, and after ingestion of <100 mg gluten/d. These methods also allowed us to detect GFD infringement in CD patients. Conclusions: Gluten-derived peptides could be sensitively detected in human feces in positive correlation with the amount of gluten intake. These techniques may serve to show GFD compliance or infringement and be used in clinical research in strategies to eliminate gluten immunotoxic peptides during digestion. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT01478867. Am J Clin Nutr 2012;95:670-7.

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