1.
Lack of immunogenicity of hydrolysed wheat flour in patients with coeliac disease after a short-term oral challenge.
Mandile, R, Picascia, S, Parrella, C, Camarca, A, Gobbetti, M, Greco, L, Troncone, R, Gianfrani, C, Auricchio, R
Alimentary pharmacology & therapeutics. 2017;46(4):440-446
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Plain language summary
A gluten-free diet is currently the only reliable therapeutic approach for coeliac disease (CD), an immune-mediated condition where eating gluten causes intestinal inflammation. Hydrolysing wheat flour with a sourdough enriched with lactobacilli and fungal proteases has been shown to be effective in reducing the gluten in the bread baked with it to less that 10ppm (which should be safe for CD patients). This randomised prospective study was designed to confirm the lack of an immunological response to the hydrolysed gluten in CD patients, both in vitro and in vivo. 20 CD patients who were in clinical remission and had followed a gluten-free diet (GFD) for at least three years were enrolled into this study and randomised to receive either natural wheat (10g gluten per day) or hydrolysed wheat (10g hydrolysed gluten per day) for three days. In vitro studies using intestinal cells from three of the study participants showed that the hydrolysed gluten did not elicit an immune response, whilst the natural gluten did. In vivo, there were no statistically significant increases in immune reactivity in the hydrolysed gluten patients, and no-one in this group experienced any symptoms. In the natural wheat group significant increases in immune reactivity to gluten were seen although only one person experienced symptoms (abdominal pain). The authors conclude that wheat flour hydrolysed with an enriched sourdough may be an alternative for the CD patient’s diet.
Abstract
BACKGROUND A gluten-free diet is currently the only reliable therapeutic strategy that is approved for coeliac disease (CD). For many patients, however, compliance remains inadequate. AIM: To investigate the immunogenicity of wheat flour that was pre-treated with selected lactobacilli and fungal proteases (hydrolysed wheat gluten) in coeliac patients. METHODS The immunogenicity of hydrolysed wheat gluten was evaluated both in vitro in intestinal T cell lines (TCLs) and in vivo in treated CD patients after a short-term gluten challenge. Twenty treated CD patients were enrolled and equally randomised into two groups. The patients ate bread that was prepared with hydrolysed wheat flour or natural wheat flour (10 g of gluten/d for 3 days). The interferon (INF)-γ responses to natural gliadin and a 33-mer peptide were assessed by the enzyme-linked immunospot (ELISPOT) assay on peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) both before and 6 days after the start of the challenge. RESULTS Hydrolysed wheat was not able to activate the TCLs from the coeliac intestinal mucosa. Consistent with the in vitro results, no significant increase in INF-γ secretion was observed in patients who consumed hydrolysed wheat flour. Conversely, the consumption of natural wheat gluten mobilised INF-γ secreting cells in the blood (P<.05). CONCLUSIONS We confirm that fermentation of wheat flour with sourdough lactobacilli and fungal proteases is capable of abolishing the T cell immunogenicity of gluten in coeliac patients. Our data also validate the short-term oral challenge as a useful tool for testing the efficacy of novel therapeutic approaches.
2.
The effects of oats on the function of gut microflora in children with coeliac disease.
Tjellström, B, Stenhammar, L, Sundqvist, T, Fälth-Magnusson, K, Hollén, E, Magnusson, KE, Norin, E, Midtvedt, T, Högberg, L
Alimentary pharmacology & therapeutics. 2014;39(10):1156-60
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Free full text
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Plain language summary
Oats have been allowed in the gluten-free diet of patients with coeliac disease (CD), however concerns have been raised that they may not be safe to eat in a subset of these patients. Short chain fatty acids (SFCAs) have been identified as a marker of inflammation and gut metabolism. Recent studies have found that children with CD often have elevated SCFA levels, indicating a disturbance in the gut microflora. The aim of this study was to identify the effect of consuming oats in children recently diagnosed with CD by examining faecal SCFAs. 116 children were treated with or without oats in their gluten-free diet for one year to see if oats affect the gut microflora. The findings of this study indicate that the children consuming oats had higher faecal SCFA concentration after one year than those not consuming oats. Based on this study, the authors’ conclude that oats do affect the gut microflora metabolism and that some coeliac children consuming oats may develop gut mucosal inflammation, leading to further future complications.
Abstract
BACKGROUND Faecal short chain fatty acids (SCFAs) are produced by the gut microflora. We have previously reported high faecal SCFA levels in children with coeliac disease (CD), indicating alteration in gut microfloral metabolism. Data accumulated over recent decades by us and others suggest that wheat-free oats can safely be included in a gluten-free diet (GFD). However, concerns have been raised with respect to the safety of oats in a subset of coeliacs. AIM: To describe faecal SCFA patterns in children with newly diagnosed CD treated for 1 year with a GFD with or without oats. METHODS This report is part of a randomised, double-blind study on the effect of a GFD containing oats (GFD-oats) vs. a standard GFD (GFD-std). Faecal samples were received from 34 children in the GFD-oats group and 37 in the GFD-std group at initial diagnosis and/or after 1 year on a GFD. Faecal SCFAs were analysed. RESULTS The GFD-std group had a significantly lower total faecal SCFA concentration at 12 months compared with 0 months (P < 0.05). In contrast, total SCFA in the GFD-oats group remained high after 1 year on the GFD. The children in the GFD-oats group had significantly higher acetic acid (P < 0.05), n-butyric acid (P < 0.05) and total SCFA concentration (P < 0.01) after 1-year diet treatment compared to the GFD-std group. CONCLUSIONS Our results indicate that oats do affect the gut microflora function, and that some coeliac children receiving oats may develop gut mucosal inflammation, that may present a risk for future complications.