TY - JOUR
T1 - Usefulness of the organ culture system in the in vitro diagnosis of coeliac disease
T2 - A multicentre study
AU - Picarelli, Antonio
AU - Di Tola, Marco
AU - Sabbatella, Luigi
AU - Anania, Maria Cristina
AU - Calabrò, Antonio
AU - Renzi, Daniela
AU - Bai, Julio Cesar
AU - Sugai, Emilia
AU - Carroccio, Antonio
AU - Di Prima, Lidia
AU - Bardella, Maria Teresa
AU - Barisani, Donatella
AU - Ribes-Koninckx, Carmen
AU - Aliaga, Ester Donat
AU - Gasparin, Maurizio
AU - Bravi, Enzo
AU - Casale, Cono
AU - Vetrano, Stefania
AU - Lettieri, Flavio
AU - Maffia, Cristina
AU - Picchi, Cristina
AU - Calella, Francesca
AU - Grappone, Cecilia
AU - Paoli, Beatrice
AU - Niveloni, Sonia
AU - Mauriño, Eduardo
AU - Vitali, Rosalinda
AU - Elli, Luca
AU - Miquel, Begoña Polo
PY - 2006/2
Y1 - 2006/2
N2 - Objective. Diagnosis of coeliac disease is based on the presence of villous atrophy which recovers following a gluten-free diet. The presence of circulating antiendomysial antibodies as well as their disappearance after a gluten-free diet supports the diagnosis. It has also been demonstrated that antiendomysial antibodies are detectable in supernatants of cultured intestinal biopsies from patients with coeliac disease. The objective of this study was to compare the histology and antiendomysial antibodies in culture supernatants of intestinal biopsies to validate the in vitro organ culture system as a future diagnostic tool for coeliac disease. Material and methods. Seventy-five antiendomysial serum-positive patients on a gluten-containing diet were evaluated. Patients underwent endoscopy with 5 biopsy fragments: 3 for histology, 1 cultured with and the other without gliadin-peptide activator. Antiendomysial antibodies were evaluated in all culture supernatants. Results. Sixty-eight patients had evidence of villous atrophy, while 73 out of 75 were positive to the organ culture system. The agreement rate between organ culture and histology results was 94%. Conclusions. As all the centres participating in the study obtained good agreement between organ culture and histology results, the new system could be considered a reliable tool for the diagnosis of coeliac disease. Nevertheless, it is possible to highlight cases with an organ culture-positive and -negative histology. This feature could be of considerable interest because, as the sensitivity of organ culture seems to be greater than the initial histology, the new system might be useful in uncertain cases where the risk of missing the diagnosis of coeliac disease is high.
AB - Objective. Diagnosis of coeliac disease is based on the presence of villous atrophy which recovers following a gluten-free diet. The presence of circulating antiendomysial antibodies as well as their disappearance after a gluten-free diet supports the diagnosis. It has also been demonstrated that antiendomysial antibodies are detectable in supernatants of cultured intestinal biopsies from patients with coeliac disease. The objective of this study was to compare the histology and antiendomysial antibodies in culture supernatants of intestinal biopsies to validate the in vitro organ culture system as a future diagnostic tool for coeliac disease. Material and methods. Seventy-five antiendomysial serum-positive patients on a gluten-containing diet were evaluated. Patients underwent endoscopy with 5 biopsy fragments: 3 for histology, 1 cultured with and the other without gliadin-peptide activator. Antiendomysial antibodies were evaluated in all culture supernatants. Results. Sixty-eight patients had evidence of villous atrophy, while 73 out of 75 were positive to the organ culture system. The agreement rate between organ culture and histology results was 94%. Conclusions. As all the centres participating in the study obtained good agreement between organ culture and histology results, the new system could be considered a reliable tool for the diagnosis of coeliac disease. Nevertheless, it is possible to highlight cases with an organ culture-positive and -negative histology. This feature could be of considerable interest because, as the sensitivity of organ culture seems to be greater than the initial histology, the new system might be useful in uncertain cases where the risk of missing the diagnosis of coeliac disease is high.
KW - Antiendomysial antibodies
KW - Coeliac disease
KW - Diagnosis
KW - Histology
KW - Organ culture
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=32644456661&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=32644456661&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/00365520510024151
DO - 10.1080/00365520510024151
M3 - Article
C2 - 16509042
AN - SCOPUS:32644456661
SN - 0036-5521
VL - 41
SP - 186
EP - 190
JO - Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology
JF - Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology
IS - 2
ER -