Transcript of a talk given by Kenneth Fine, M.D. to the Greater Louisville Celiac
Sprue Support Group, June 2003.
"Gluten sensitivity" is the process by which the immune system reacts to gluten
contained in wheat, barley, rye, and oats. The reaction begins in the intestine
because that is where the inciting antigen, gluten, is present (from food). When
this immunologic reaction damages the finger-like surface projections, the villi,
in the small intestine (a process called villous atrophy), it is called celiac disease
(or sometimes celiac sprue or gluten-sensitive enteropathy). The clinical focus
of gluten-induced disease has always been on the intestine because that is the only
way the syndrome was recognized before screening tests were developed. The intestinal
syndrome consists mainly of diarrhea, gas, bloating, nausea, vomiting, fat in the
stool, nutrient malabsorption, and even constipation. Although the small intestine
is always the portal of the immune response to dietary gluten, it is not always
affected in a way that results in villous atrophy. Even though recent research has
shown that celiac disease is much more common than previously suspected, affecting
1 in 100-200 Americans and Europeans, past and emerging evidence indicates that
it accounts for only a small portion of the broader gluten sensitive clinical spectrum
(often referred to as the "Tip of the Gluten Sensitive Iceberg"). With better understanding
of how gluten triggers immune and autoimmune reactions in the body under the control
of various genes, and advancing techniques of detecting these reactions, it is becoming
apparent that the majority of the gluten sensitive population (the submerged “mass
of the iceberg”) do not manifest villous atrophy in its classic, complete form and
therefore do not have celiac disease. In these non-celiac, gluten sensitive individuals,
the brunt of the immune reaction either affects the function of the intestine, causing
symptoms without structural damage, affects other tissues of the body (and virtually
all tissues have been affected in different individuals), or both. This is important
because the commonly used diagnostic tests of clinically important gluten sensitivity
(blood tests for certain antibodies and intestinal biopsies) are only positive when
villous atrophy of the small intestine is present. But if only a small minority
of gluten sensitive individuals actually develop celiac disease, the majority, who
have not yet or may never develop villous atrophy, with or without symptoms, can
remain undiagnosed and untreated for years. This can result in significant immune
and nutritional consequences, many of which are irreversible even after treatment
with a gluten-free diet. Some of these disorders include loss of hormone secretion
by glands (hypothyroidism, diabetes, pancreatic insufficiency, etc), osteoporosis,
short stature, cognitive impairment, and other inflammatory bowel, liver, and skin
diseases, among others. Only with early diagnosis, can these problems be prevented
or reversed.
I am here to report on a scientific paradigm shift regarding early diagnosis of
gluten sensitivity based on about 30 years of medical research by myself and others.
My message is that earlier and more inclusive diagnosis of gluten sensitivity than
has been allowed by blood tests and intestinal biopsies must be developed to prevent
the nutritional and immune consequences of long-standing gluten sensitivity. Imagine
going to a cardiologist because your blood pressure is high or you’re having chest
pain, and the doctor says he is going to do a biopsy of your heart to see what is
wrong. If it ‘looks’ O.K., you are told you have no problem and no treatment is
prescribed because you have not yet had a heart attack showing on the biopsy. You
would not think very highly of the doctor utilizing this approach because, after
all, isn’t it damage to the heart that you would want to prevent? But for the intestine
and gluten sensitivity, current practice embraces this fallacious idea that until
an intestinal biopsy shows structural damage, no diagnosis or therapeutic intervention
is offered. This has to change now because with newly developed diagnostic tests,
we can diagnose the problem before the end stage tissue damage has occurred, that
is "before the villi are gone," with the idea of preventing all the nutritional
and immune consequences that go with it.
There are many misconceptions regarding the clinical presentation of gluten sensitivity
or celiac disease: For example, that you cannot be gluten sensitive if you have
not lost weight, are obese, have no intestinal symptoms, or are an adult or elderly.
However, the most widely held and clinically troublesome misconception is that a
negative screening blood test, or one only showing antigliadin antibodies (without
the autoimmune antiendomysial or antitissue transglutaminase antibody) rules out
any problem caused by gluten at that time or permanently. For some reason, the high
“specificity” of these blood tests has been tightly embraced. Specificity means
if the test is positive, you surely have the disease being tested for with little
chance that the positive is a "false positive." But sadly, a negative test does
not mean you do not have the problem. This is the biggest pitfall of all because
the only thing a very specific test, like blood testing for celiac disease, can
do is "rule in" the disease; it can not "rule it out." If you’ve got very far advanced
and/or long-standing celiac disease, it is likely that the test will be positive.
However, several studies have now revealed that it is only those with significant
villous atrophy of the small intestine who regularly show a positive antiendomysial
or antitissue transglutaminase antibody, the specific tests relied upon most heavily
for diagnosis of gluten-induced disease. When there was only partial villous atrophy,
only 30% had a positive test. More disturbing perhaps, were the results with respect
to screening first degree relatives of celiacs with blood tests. Despite some biopsy-proven
early inflammatory changes in the small intestine but without villi damage, all
blood tests were negative.
For some reason, it’s been perfectly acceptable to celiac diagnosticians that a
patient must have far advanced intestinal gluten sensitivity, i.e., villous atrophy,
to be diagnosed and a candidate for treatment with a gluten-free diet. That means
from the specific testing standpoint, there’s never (or rarely) a false positive.
But what about the larger majority of gluten-affected people who do not presently
have or may never get this end stage, villous atrophic presentation? They are out
of luck as far as blood testing is concerned. So the fact is that we have erroneously
relied on specificity (always picks up gluten sensitivity after it has caused villous
atrophy, never having a false positive) instead of sensitivity (doesn’t miss gluten
sensitive people even though they might be picked up early, even before full-blown
celiac disease develops). Would a test relying on specificity rather than sensitivity
be good enough for you, or your children? Consider the risk of not getting an early
diagnosis versus going on a gluten free diet a few months or years prematurely.
While I do not recommend anyone to have a biopsy (especially children) for diagnosis
because of the shortcomings and invasive nature of this technique, I particularly
do not want someone to have a biopsy showing villous atrophy, since by that time,
associated bone, brain, growth, and/or gland problems are all but guaranteed. And
here is another related problem: you have a positive blood test, but, if a small
bowel biopsy comes back normal or nearly normal, you are told that the blood test
must have been a “false positive” and that gluten is not your problem. Would you
believe that, especially in light of the fact that most such people would have gotten
the blood test in the first place because of a specific symptom or problem? Let’s
hope not. All that means (positive blood test, negative biopsy) is that the gluten
sensitivity (evidenced by antibodies to gliadin in the blood) has not yet damaged
your intestines severely.
Evidence of this comes from a study that I performed. We tested 227 normal volunteers
with blood tests for celiac disease. Twenty-five of these people (11%) had either
antigliadin IgG or IgA in their blood versus only one (0.4%) that had antiendomysial,
antitissue transglutaminase, and antigliadin IgA in the blood. So for every one
person in a population that has the antibodies that have 100% specificity for celiac
disease of the intestine (antiendomysial and antitissue transglutaminase), there
are 24 that have antibodies to gliadin that may not have celiac disease. So what
is going on with the 11% with antigliadin antibodies in blood? Are these false positives
(rhetorically)? You’re telling me that there is a disease called celiac disease
and it is associated with antibodies to gliadin in the blood and sometimes it damages
the intestine? But people with antigliadin antibody in their blood but no other
antibodies do not have a clinically significant immunologic reaction to gluten?
Do you see the problem? How can 11% be false positives? What about the 89% with
none of these antibodies? You cannot equate having no antibodies at all (a negative
test) with having antigliadin antibodies alone. If you have antibodies to gliadin,
something is going on here. Where there’s smoke there’s fire. The purpose of this
study was to test this hypothesis: that an antigliadin antibody alone does indicate
the presence of an immune reaction to gluten that may be clinically important. Using
tests for intestinal malabsorption and abnormal permeability (i.e., tests of small
bowel function, unlike a biopsy which says nothing about function), we found that
45% of people with only an antigliadin IgG or IgA antibody in blood (without either
antiendomysial or antitissue transglutaminase antibody) already had measurable intestinal
dysfunction, compared to only 5% of people with no antibodies to gliadin in their
blood. When we did biopsies of these people’s intestines, none had villous atrophy
with only a few showing some early inflammation. Thus, having an antigliadin antibody
in your blood does mean something: that there is nearly a 1 in 2 chance that functional
intestinal damage is already present even though it may not be visible structurally
at the resolution attained by a light microscope assessment of a biopsy.
As mentioned at the outset, not all gluten sensitive individuals develop villous
atrophy. Evidence for this has been around for a long time. In 1980, a medical publication
titled "Gluten-Sensitive Diarrhea" reported that 8 people with chronic diarrhea,
sometimes for as long as 20 years, that resolved completely when treated with a
gluten-free diet, had mild small bowel inflammation but no villous atrophy. In 1996
in a paper called “Gluten Sensitivity with Mild Enteropathy,” ten patients, who
were thought to have celiac disease because of a positive antiendomysial antibody
blood test, had small bowel biopsies showing no villous atrophy. But amazingly,
these biopsies were shown to react to gluten when put in a Petri dish, proving the
tissue immunologically reacted to gluten (which was likely anyway from their positive
blood tests). Two other reports from Europe published in 2001 showed gluten sensitivity
without villous atrophy (and hence without celiac disease). In one of these studies,
30% of patients with abdominal symptoms suggestive of irritable bowel syndrome having
the celiac-like HLA-DQ2 gene but no antibodies to gliadin in their blood, had these
antibodies detected in intestinal fluid (obtained by placing a tube down into the
small intestine). Thus, in these people with intestinal symptoms, but normal blood
tests and biopsies, the antigliadin antibodies were only inside the intestine (where
they belong if you consider that the immune stimulating gluten also is inside the
intestine), not in the blood. This is the theme we have followed in my research,
as we are about to see.
More proof that patients in these studies were gluten sensitivity came from the
fact that they all got better on a gluten-free diet, and developed recurrent symptoms
when "challenged" with gluten. Although the gluten-sensitive patients in these studies
did not have the villous atrophy that would yield a diagnosis of celiac disease,
small bowel biopsies in many of them showed some, albeit minimal, inflammatory abnormalities.
Yet, when a symptomatic patient in clinical practice is biopsied and found to have
only minimal abnormalities on small bowel biopsy, clinicians do not put any stock
in the possibility of their having gluten sensitivity. As much as I would like to
take credit for the concept, you can see from these studies that I did not invent
the idea that not all gluten sensitive patients have villous atrophy. It has been
around for at least 23 years, and reported from different parts of the world.
For many years there has also been proof that the intestine is not the only tissue
targeted by the immune reaction to gluten. The prime example of this a disease called
dermatitis herpetiformis where the gluten sensitivity manifests primarily in skin,
with only mild or no intestinal involvement. Now from more recent research it seems
that the almost endless number of autoimmune diseases of various tissues of the
body also may have the immune response to dietary gluten and its consequent autoimmune
reaction to tissue transglutaminase as the main immunologic cause. A study from
Italy showed that the longer gluten sensitive people eat gluten, the more likely
they are to develop autoimmune diseases. They found that in childhood celiacs, the
prevalence of autoimmune disease rose from a baseline of 5% at age 2 to almost 35%
by age 20. This is a big deal if you think how much more complicated one’s life
is being gluten sensitive AND having an autoimmune disease.
So preventing autoimmune disease is one very important reason why early diagnosis
and treatment of gluten sensitivity is important. Early diagnosis before celiac
disease develops also holds the potential of preventing other clinical problems
such as malnutrition, osteoporosis, infertility, neurologic and psychiatric disorders,
neurotube defects (like spina bifida) in your children, and various forms of gastrointestinal
cancer. Another reason for early diagnosis and treatment is very straightforward
and that is because many gluten sensitive individuals, even if they have not yet
developed celiac disease (villous atrophy), have symptoms that abate when gluten
is removed from their diet. Furthermore, from a study done in Finland, a gluten
sensitive individual who reports no symptoms at the time of diagnosis can improve
both psychological and physical well-being after treatment for one year with a gluten-free
diet.
Despite the common sense and research evidence that early diagnosis of gluten sensitivity
offers many health advantages over a diagnostic scheme that can only detect the
minority and end-stage patients, until now, the limitation was still in the tests
being employed. As mentioned above, the main test used for primary (before symptoms
develop) and secondary (after symptoms develop) screening for celiac disease, blood
tests for antigliadin and antiendomysial/antitissue transglutaminase antibodies,
are only routinely positive after damage to intestinal villi is extensive. As shown
in a 1990 publication, this is because unless you have full blown, untreated celiac
disease, the IgA antibodies to gliadin are only INSIDE the intestine not in the
blood. Measuring antigliadin antibody in blood and intestinal fluid (obtained by
the laborious technique of having research subjects swallow a long tube that migrates
into the upper small intestine), researchers found that in untreated celiacs, antigliadin
antibody was present in the blood and inside the intestine, whereas after villous
atrophy healed following a year on a gluten-free diet, the antigliadin antibody
was no longer in the blood but was still measurable inside the intestine in those
with ongoing mild inflammation.
An important conclusion can be drawn from these results, as these researchers and
myself have done: gluten sensitive individuals who do not have villous atrophy (the
mass of the iceberg), will only have evidence of their immunologic reaction to gluten
by a test that assesses for antigliadin IgA antibodies where that foodstuff is located,
inside the intestinal tract, not the blood. This makes sense anyway, because the
immune system of the intestine, when fighting an antigen or infection inside the
intestine, wages the fight right in that location in an attempt to neutralize the
invading antigen, thereby preventing its penetration into the body. It does this
with T cells on the surface of the epithelium, the intraepithelial lymphocytes,
and with secretory IgA made with a special component called secretory piece that
allows its secretion into the intestine.
The excellent English researchers that made the discovery that they could detect
the immunologic reaction to gluten inside the intestine before it was evident on
blood tests or biopsies knew it was a breakthrough, testing it many times over in
different ways, and further extending the clinical spectrum of gluten-induced disease
to include a phase before the villi are damaged, so-called "latent celiac sprue".
Furthermore, they developed this technique of assessing the intestinal contents
for antigliadin antibodies into what they viewed as a "noninvasive screening test
for early or latent celiac sprue" (what others and I would simply call "gluten sensitivity").
However, this was not exactly noninvasive, nor was it simple. It still required
the patient to swallow a tube, followed by a complete lavage of all their gastrointestinal
contents with many gallons of nonabsorbable fluid that had to be passed by rectum
and collected into a large vat to be analyzed for the presence of antigliadin antibodies.
While this was indeed a conceptual breakthrough, it practically went unnoticed by
the medical community because the cumbersome procedure of washing out the intestine
just could not be done in a normal clinical setting. To this day, I am not sure
how many people even know that it was not me, but rather this well known celiac
research group, led by the late Dr. Anne Ferguson, who pioneered the assessment
of the intestinal contents as a viable and more sensitive source of testing material
for the early reactions of the immune system to gluten. What we did in my research,
is to refine and simplify the method of collecting and measuring these intestinal
IgA antigliadin antibodies before they can be detected in blood. That is, instead
of washing out the antibodies from the intestine, we allow them to be excreted naturally
in the stool (feces). And so with that idea, and our ability to measure these antibodies
in stool, as others before us had done for fecal IgE antibodies directed to food
antigens, our new gluten (and other food) sensitivity stool testing method was born.
It was actually my research of microscopic colitis that led me to discover that
stool analysis was the best way of assessing for gluten sensitivity before celiac
disease develops. Microscopic colitis is a very common chronic diarrheal syndrome,
accounting for 10% of all causes of chronic diarrhea in all patients, and is the
most common cause of ongoing chronic diarrhea in a treated celiac, affecting 4%
of all celiac patients. However, from my published research, despite the presence
of the celiac HLA-DQ2 gene in 64% of patients with microscopic colitis, very few
get positive blood tests or biopsies consistent with celiac disease. Yet, small
bowel biopsies revealed some degree of inflammation sometimes with mild villous
blunting in 70%. According to the facts and previously discussed shortcomings of
celiac blood tests, antibodies to gliadin are unlikely to be detected in the blood
in these patients because they lack villous atrophy. So negative blood tests for
antigliadin antibodies per se did not, in my mind, rule out the possibility that
these patients with microscopic colitis, a disease that under the microscope looks
like celiac disease but of the colon, and that affects many celiac patients, were
not gluten sensitive themselves. But as Dr. Ferguson’s research revealed, these
antibodies might be detectable inside the intestine. And since we surely were not
going to perform that cumbersome intestinal lavage test in my patients, we decided
to see if we could find these antibodies in the stool as a reflection of what is
coming through the intestine.
Here’s the first set of data that we found showing the superior sensitivity of stool
testing versus blood tests for antigliadin IgA antibodies. In untreated celiac disease
patients, we found a 100% positivity in the stool versus only 76% in blood. In hundreds
of microscopic colitis patients since tested, only 9% have antigliadin antibody
in blood but 76% have it in stool. And the same is true of 79% of family members
of patients with celiac disease; 77% of patients with any autoimmune disease; 57%
of people with irritable bowel syndrome-like abdominal symptoms; and 50% of people
with chronic diarrhea of unknown origin, all of whom have only about a 10-12% positivity
rate for blood tests (like normal volunteers). Thus, when you go to the source of
production of these antibodies for testing, the intestine, the percentage of any
population at a higher than normal genetic and/or clinical risk of gluten sensitivity
showing a positive antigliadin stool test is 5 to 7.5 times higher than would be
detected using blood tests. In normal people without specific symptoms or syndromes,
the stool test is just under 3 times more likely to be positive than blood (29%
vs. 11%, respectively). That’s a lot more people reacting to gluten than 1 in 150
who have celiac disease. 29% of the normal population of this country, almost all
of whom eat gluten, showing an intestinal immunologic reaction to the most immune-stimulating
of dietary proteins really is not so high or far fetched a percentage, especially
in light of the facts that 11% of them display this reaction in blood, and 42% carry
the HLA-DQ2 or DQ8 celiac genes.
Why is this so important? Because some people with microscopic colitis never get
better when they're treated, and most autoimmune syndrome syndromes only progress
with time, requiring harsh and sometimes dangerous immunosuppressive drugs just
for disease control. If the immune reaction to gluten is in any way at the cause
of these diseases as research suggests, and if we had at our disposal a sensitive
test that can diagnose this gluten sensitivity without having to wait for the intestinal
villi to be damaged, then treatment with a gluten free diet might allow the affected
tissues to return to normal or at least, prevent progression. We now have that test
in fecal antigliadin antibody. Just a few weeks ago we completed the first follow-up
phase of our study: what happens when a gluten sensitive person without villous
atrophy goes on a gluten-free diet for one or two years. While I am still gathering
and analyzing the data, most of the subjects reported a much improved clinical status
(utilizing an objective measure of symptoms and well being). Not everybody gets
well, because sadly not everyone stays on a gluten-free diet (as they sometimes
admit on the surveys). Some people have the misconception that if they don’t have
celiac disease, but "I just have gluten sensitivity" then maybe they do not have
to be strict with their gluten elimination from the diet. I do not think that is
the case. Although a gluten free diet is like anything: less gluten is not as damaging
as more gluten, but certainly no gluten is optimal if a gluten sensitive person
desires optimal health.
Of the first 25 people with refractory or relapsing microscopic colitis treated
with a gluten-free diet, 19 resolved diarrhea completely, and another 5 were notably
improved. Thus, a gluten-free diet helped these patients with a chronic immune disease
of a tissue other than small bowel (in this case the colon), who have been shown
to be gluten sensitive by a positive stool test in my lab. The same may be true
of patients with chronic autoimmune diseases of any other tissue, but who do not
have full-blown celiac disease. Gluten-free dietary treatment, sometimes combined
with dairy-free diet as well, has been shown to help diabetes, psoriasis, inflammatory
bowel disease, eczema, autism, and others.
Thus, my approach, and I believe the most sensitive and most complete approach,
for screening for early diagnosis and preventive diagnosis for clinically important
gluten sensitivity is a stool test for antigliadin and antitissue transglutaminase
IgA antibodies (IgG is not detectable in the intestine) and a malabsorption test.
The malabsorption test we developed is special, because you no longer have to collect
your stool for three days; we can find the same information with just one stool
specimen. Combining this stool testing with HLA gene testing, which we do with a
cotton-tipped swab rubbed inside the mouth, is the best diagnostic approach available.
Who should be screened for gluten sensitivity? Certainly family members of celiacs
or gluten sensitive people being at the highest genetic risk. For the most part,
all of the following patient groups have been shown to be at higher risk than normal
to be gluten sensitive: chronic diarrhea; microscopic colitis; dermatitis herpetiformis;
diabetes mellitus; any autoimmune syndrome (of which there is an almost end-less
number like rheumatoid arthritis, multiple sclerosis, lupus, dermatomyositis, psoriasis,
thyroiditis, alopecia areata, hepatitis, etc.); Hepatitis C; asthma; chronic liver
disease; osteoporosis; iron deficiency anemia; short stature in children; Down’s
syndrome; female infertility; peripheral neuropathy, seizures, and other neurologic
syndromes; depression and other psychiatric syndromes; irritable bowel syndrome;
Crohn’s Disease; and people with severe gastroesophageal reflux (GERD). Autism and
possibly the attention deficit disorders are emerging as syndromes that may improve
with a gluten- free (and additionally casein-free) diet. A diagnosed celiac might
be interested in our testing to know (after some treatment period no shorter than
a year) that there is no on-going damage from malabsorption, for which we have a
test. If a celiac is having ongoing symptoms or other problems, a follow-up test
should be done just to be sure there’s no hidden gluten in the diet, or something
else that could be present, like pancreatic enzyme deficiency which often accompanies
celiac disease, especially in its early stages of treatment.
Historically, with respects to diagnostic methods for celiac disease, from 100 A.D.,
when celiac disease was first described as an emaciating, incapacitating, intestinal
symptom-causing syndrome, to 1950, we had just one diagnostic test: clinical observation
for development of the end stage of the disease. Then in 1940 to 1960, when the
discovery of gluten as the cause of celiac disease occurred, the best diagnostic
test was removing gluten from the diet watching for clinical improvement. It was
during this period that the 72-hour fecal fat and D-xylose absorption tests were
developed as measures of gluten-induced intestinal dysfunction/damage. In the mid-
to late1950’s, various intestinal biopsy methods were pioneered and utilized, showing
total villous atrophy as the diagnostic hallmark of celiac disease. You’ve heard
the intestinal biopsy called the “gold standard”; well as you can see, it is a 50
year-old test, and thus, the "old" standard. It was not until the 1970’s and 80’s
(and improved upon in the 1990’s) that blood tests for antigliadin and antiendomysial/antitissue
transglutaminase were developed, but again these tests like all methods before,
can reliably reveal only the “heart attack” equivalent of the intestinal celiac
syndrome: significant villous atrophy, bad celiac disease.
We are in a new century, a new millennium, and I have built upon what my research
predecessors have started; mostly on the work of researchers who laboriously put
down tubes and sucked out intestinal fluid for testing for antigliadin antibody
when it was not present in blood. We now know that a stool test for antigliadin
antibody is just as good and much simpler. The wide-reaching ramifications of knowing
that so many more people and patients are gluten sensitive than have ever been previously
known has led me to assume a professional life of medical public service. To do
so, I started a 501(c)3 not-for-profit institute called the Intestinal Health Institute,
have brought these new diagnostic tests to the public on the internet (at http://www.enterolab.com),
and volunteer my time helping people with health problems by email and by lecturing.
With greater awareness and education of both the public and medical community that
early diagnosis of gluten sensitivity can be achieved before the villi are gone,
more of the gluten sensitive iceberg will be diagnosed and treated early, leading
to far fewer gluten-related symptoms and diseases than has ever been experienced
before.
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