4.7 Article

Relationship between Persistent Gastrointestinal Symptoms and Duodenal Histological Findings after Adequate Gluten-Free Diet: A Gray Area of Celiac Disease Management in Adult Patients

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NUTRIENTS
卷 13, 期 2, 页码 -

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu13020600

关键词

celiac disease; gluten-free diet; gastrointestinal symptoms; malabsorption signs; duodenal histology; slow responders

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  1. Sapienza University of Rome

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The study found that approximately 36.3% of celiac disease patients continue to experience persistent gastrointestinal symptoms and/or malabsorption signs despite being on a gluten-free diet. This persistence is associated with a longer duration of symptoms before CD diagnosis (>= 5 years) and the presence of constipation at the time of CD diagnosis. Other variables, including age at CD diagnosis, sex, duration of GFD, comorbidities, CD serology positivity, and severity of duodenal damage, were not found to have an association with the persistence of symptoms/signs. The relationship between symptoms/signs and histological findings remains unclear in CD management.
A gluten-free diet (GFD) leads to a rapid improvement in gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms, biochemical alterations and duodenal histological damage in the majority of celiac disease (CD) patients. This study aimed to assess the frequency and factors associated with the persistence of GI symptoms/malabsorption signs and their relationship with duodenal histological findings among CD patients on an adequate GFD (mean duration 16 months, range 12-28 months). This longitudinal cohort study included 102 adult CD patients (median age 38.5 years, range 18-76 years, F = 71.6%) diagnosed between 2012 and 2018. A total of 36.3% of the included patients had persistent GI symptoms and/or malabsorption signs (Group 1), while the remaining patients had complete GI well-being without malabsorption signs (Group 2) at the time of histological re-evaluation. The persistence of GI symptoms/signs was associated with a long duration of symptoms/signs before CD diagnosis (>= 5 years) (OR 5.3; 95% CI 1.3-21.8) and the presence of constipation at the time of CD diagnosis (OR 7.5; 95% CI 1.3-42) while for other variables, including age at CD diagnosis, sex, duration of GFD, comorbidities, CD serology positivity and severity of duodenal damage at histological re-evaluation, no association was found. According to our results, the persistence of symptoms/signs is not associated with histological findings, and their relationship could be a gray area in CD management.

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