학술논문

Identification of a serum transglutaminase threshold value for the noninvasive diagnosis of symptomatic adult celiac disease patients: a retrospective study
Original Article-Alimentary Tract
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Journal of Gastroenterology. November 2016, Vol. 51 Issue 11, p1031, 9 p.
Subject
Diagnosis
Comparative analysis
Endoscopy -- Comparative analysis
Blood tests -- Comparative analysis
Medical research -- Comparative analysis
Celiac disease -- Diagnosis
Blood -- Medical examination
Medicine, Experimental -- Comparative analysis
Language
English
ISSN
0944-1174
Abstract
Author(s): Marco Di Tola [sup.1], Mariacatia Marino [sup.1], Simone Goetze [sup.1] [sup.2], Rossella Casale [sup.1], Sara Di Nardi [sup.1], Raffaele Borghini [sup.1], Giuseppe Donato [sup.3], Antonio Tiberti [sup.1], Antonio Picarelli [...]
Background A celiac disease (CD) diagnosis is based on duodenal histology, with the exception of children showing anti-tissue transglutaminase (anti-tTG) serum levels exceeding ten times the cut-off. Our aim was to reproduce this simplified approach in adults, identifying an anti-tTG threshold value useful to diagnose CD without endoscopic procedures. Methods A total of 671 adult CD patients were subjected to blood sampling to determine anti-tTG serum levels, as well as to endoscopy with biopsy to perform duodenal histology. The anti-tTG serum levels/cut-off ratio was compared with the degree of duodenal lesions. Results Anti-tTG serum levels/cut-off ratio determined in patients with type IIIc was significantly higher than that measured in patients with type IIIb (p < 0.001), IIIa (p < 0.001), II (p < 0.05) and 0 (p < 0.001) of Marsh-Oberhuber histological classification. A significant correlation (r = 0.297, p < 0.0001) was found between the anti-tTG serum levels/cut-off ratio and the degree of duodenal lesions. The anti-tTG serum levels/cut-off ratio was classified as an accurate parameter (AUC = 0.715, p 3.6 (sensitivity = 76.8 %, PPV = 97.2 %). Conclusions The anti-tTG serum levels/cut-off ratio correlates with the degree of duodenal lesions and, if used with the threshold value >3.6, could avoid endoscopy with biopsy in about 75 % of seropositive adults waiting for CD diagnosis. However, since this procedure could also imply CD diagnosis in almost 3 % of seropositive patients with normal villous architecture, a consensus opinion is needed to suggest its use in the diagnosis of adult CD.