Applicability of the New ESPGHAN Guidelines for Diagnosing Coeliac Disease in Children from Resource Limited Countries.

Journal: Journal Of The College Of Physicians And Surgeons--Pakistan : JCPSP
Published:
Abstract

Coeliac Disease (CD) is an immune-mediated systemic disorder elicited by the ingestion of gluten. Small-bowel biopsies and histology has been the gold standard for diagnosing CD. The modified ESPGHAN guidelines recommend that in symptomatic children with anti-tissue-Transglutaminase (tTG) titre of > 10 times Upper-Limit-of-Normal (ULN), diagnosis of CD can be made without small-bowel biopsies. However, positive HLA-DQ2/DQ8 serotype and anti-Endomysial Antibodies (EMA) are necessary. Studies from resource-limited countries have demonstrated applicability of the ESPGHAN guidelines for serological diagnosis of CD. CD should not be diagnosed on the basis of a single high tTG-titre. Small-bowel biopsies are necessary for diagnosing CD in asymptomatic children and those with tTG-titre < 10 x ULN. Management of CD needs lifelong gluten free diet.

Authors
Siba Paul, Huma Mazhar, Christine Spray
Relevant Conditions

Celiac Disease, Malabsorption