Clinical Relevance of Anti-Gliadin Seropositivity in the Ageing Population: A Long-term Follow-up Study

Authors

  • Anitta Tellervo Ruuskanen Department of Neurology, Päijät-Häme Joint Authority for Health and Wellbeing; Lahti, Finland
  • Liisa Luostarinen Department of Neurology, Päijät-Häme Joint Authority for Health and Wellbeing; Lahti, Finland
  • Heini Huhtala Faculty of Social Sciences, Tampere University, Tampere, Finland
  • Raisa Valve Department of Nutrition, Päijät-Häme Joint Authority for Health and Wellbeing, Lahti, Finland
  • Katri Kaukinen Department of Internal Medicine, Tampere University Hospital and Faculty of Medicine and Health Technology, Tampere University, Tampere, Finland

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15403/jgld-4025

Keywords:

celiac disease, gliadin, gluten sensitive enteropathies, comorbidities, autoimmune disease

Abstract

Aims: To explore if anti-gliadin antibody (AGA) positivity is associated with overall mortality or morbidity and especially with the development of coeliac disease during long-term gluten exposure.

Methods: The study population comprised 130 persistently AGA-positive but transglutaminase-2 (anti- TG2) -negative and 52 persistently AGA- and anti-TG2 -negative subjects aged 64-88 years. HLA-typing for DQ2 and DQ8 (coeliac-type HLA) was performed on the AGA-positives. The medical records of the study population were reviewed to compare mortality and morbidity during a long-term follow-up of 12-13 years since the initial antibody analysis.

Results: Mortality or cumulative prevalence of gastroenterological, autoimmune, psychiatric, cardiovascular or any malignant diseases did not differ statistically between the AGA-positives and the AGA-negatives. Neurological diseases were more common in the AGA-negative group (p=0.017), but there was no statistical difference between the prevalence of any particular neurological diseases. Coeliac-type HLA in AGA-positive subjects did not influence mortality or morbidity. However, during the last six to seven years the incidence of immunological diseases was more common in the AGA-positive subjects without coeliac-type HLA than in those with coeliac-type HLA, or in the AGA-negative group (p=0.020). None of the persistently AGA-positive subjects developed clinically diagnosed coeliac disease.

Conclusions: Gliadin antibody positivity without coeliac disease does not predict mortality or morbidity in the ageing population continuing to consume gluten for over ten years.

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Published

2022-03-19

How to Cite

1.
Ruuskanen AT, Luostarinen L, Huhtala H, Valve R, Kaukinen K. Clinical Relevance of Anti-Gliadin Seropositivity in the Ageing Population: A Long-term Follow-up Study. JGLD [Internet]. 2022 Mar. 19 [cited 2025 Jun. 18];31(1):11-7. Available from: https://www.jgld.ro/jgld/index.php/jgld/article/view/4025

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Original Article