Title of article
Refractory coeliac disease
Author/Authors
Severin Daum، نويسنده , , Christophe Cellier، نويسنده , , Chris J.J. Mulder، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
12
From page
413
To page
424
Abstract
A small proportion of coeliac disease (CD) patients fail to improve after a gluten-free diet (GFD) and may be considered as atypical regarding their outcome (refractory coeliac disease). The aim of this study is to diagnose and manage patients with CD who fail to improve after a GFD. Refractory coeliac disease (RCD) is a malabsorption syndrome defined by persisting villous atrophy with, usually, an increase of intraepithelial lymphocytes (IELs) in the small bowel in spite of a strict GFD and comprises a heterogenous group of diseases. Some of these diseases have to be excluded and can be treated by specific therapies like antibiotics in tropical sprue and giardiasis and immune globulin substitution in common variable immunodeficiency, while other malabsorption syndromes are less well defined and may require immunosuppressive therapy. Standardized treatment, however, has not been evaluated in such patients so far.
In a subgroup of patients with RCD, an abnormal intraepithelial lymphocyte (IEL) population may be observed with the lack of surface expression of usual T-cell markers (CD3–CD8 and/or the T-cell receptor (TCR)) on IELs associated with T-cell clonality pattern suggest the presence of an early enteropathy-associated T-cell lymphoma (EATL) in a subgroup of patients with RCD. This hypothesis has been supported by studies, which revealed progression into overt intestinal T-cell lymphomas in a subgroup of RCD. Steroid treatment has been reported effective even in patients with underlying early EATL. However, long-term results are unsatisfactory in most of these patients with RCD and parenteral nutrition has to be applied in some of these cases. First results with more aggressive chemotherapies and use of cytokines are under way.
Due to the difficulty of diagnostic and therapeutic regimens patients should be referred to tertiary centres for coeliac disease.
Keywords
chemotherapy , gluten-free diet , Clonality , refractory coeliac disease , abnormal IEL phenotype , immunosuppressive therapy , bone-marrow transplantations
Journal title
Best Practice and Research Clinical Gastroenterology
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Best Practice and Research Clinical Gastroenterology
Record number
466516
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