Persistent intraepithelial lymphocytosis in celiac patients adhering to gluten-free diet is not abolished despite a gluten contamination elimination diet
The gluten-free diet (GFD) is the only validated treatment for celiac disease (CD), but
despite strict adherence, complete mucosal recovery is rarely obtained. The aim of our study was
to assess whether complete restitutio ad integrum could be achieved by adopting a restrictive
diet (Gluten Contamination Elimination Diet, GCED) or may depend on time of exposure to GFD.
Two cohorts of CD patients, with persisting Marsh II/Grade A lesion at duodenal biopsy after
12–18 months of GFD (early control) were identified. Patients in Cohort A were re-biopsied after
a three-month GCED (GCED control) and patients in Cohort B were re-biopsied after a minimum
of two years on a standard GFD subsequent to early control (late control). Ten patients in Cohort
A and 19 in Cohort B completed the study protocol. There was no change in the classification of
duodenal biopsies in both cohorts. The number of intraepithelial lymphocytes, TCR
+ (T-Cell
Receptor gamma delta) T cell and eosinophils significantly decreased at GCED control (Cohort A)
and at late control (Cohort B), compared to early control. Duodenal intraepithelial lymphocytosis
persisting in CD patients during GFD is not eliminated by a GCED and is independent of the length
of GFD. [NCT 02711696