Histologic follow-up of people with celiac disease on a gluten-free diet: Slow and incomplete recovery

306Citations
Citations of this article
171Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

To assess histologic recovery in response to gluten withdrawal in celiac disease, 158 patients seen in our hospital during a 15-year period underwent follow-up small intestine biopsies (SIBs) within 2 years after starting a gluten-free diet; further SIBs were done if villous atrophy was present. A modified Marsh classification was used (IIIA, partial villous atrophy; IIIB, subtotal villous atrophy; IIIC, total villous atrophy). Of patients with Marsh IIIA, IIIB, or IIIC lesions, histologic remission was seen in 65.0% within 2 years, 85.3% within 5 years, and 89.9% in long-term follow-up. Eleven patients (7.0%) with persisting (partial) villous atrophy had symptoms and signs of malabsorption and were considered to have refractory celiac disease; 5 of them developed an enteropathy-associated T-cell lymphoma. Children recovered up to 95% within 2 years and 100% in the long-term. Histologic recovery in celiac disease after starting a gluten-free diet takes time and is incomplete or absent in a substantial subgroup of patients (10.1% villous atrophy after 5 years). Systematic follow-up of patients with celiac disease and the malabsorption syndrome and secondary complications is needed.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Wahab, P. J., Meijer, J. W. R., & Mulder, C. J. J. (2002). Histologic follow-up of people with celiac disease on a gluten-free diet: Slow and incomplete recovery. American Journal of Clinical Pathology, 118(3), 459–463. https://doi.org/10.1309/EVXT-851X-WHLC-RLX9

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free