News

Consider Celiac Disease in Autoimmune Disorder Patients


 

EXPERT ANALYSIS FROM THE CONGRESS OF CLINICAL RHEUMATOLOGY

DESTIN, FLA. – Consider screening for celiac disease in children with juvenile idiopathic arthritis, arthromyalgias, and myositis, advised Dr. Alexa B. Adams at the Congress of Clinical Rheumatology.

Celiac disease has a strong association with numerous autoimmune disorders. Untreated celiac disease poses serious health consequences, such as short stature, failure to thrive, osteopenia/osteoporosis, and enteropathy-associated T-cell lymphoma. Early diagnosis and treatment could obviate or reduce the need for the more aggressive treatments that are typically prescribed for these associated autoimmune disorders, said Dr. Adams, a pediatric rheumatologist and pediatrician at Cornell University, New York.

The identification and treatment of celiac disease in the setting of autoimmune disorders also appear to have the potential to alter the course of subsequent autoimmune disease, she said.

A link between celiac disease and juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA), for example, is well established. Several studies have demonstrated an increased prevalence of celiac disease among children with JIA, and cases of celiac disease in association with juvenile spondyloarthropathies and with pauciarticular, polyarticular, and psoriatic arthritis also have been reported. Furthermore, data show that a gluten-free diet can improve the musculoskeletal symptoms that are associated with celiac disease.

The mechanisms for the association between JIA and celiac disease are unknown, but may be related to ongoing intestinal permeability in untreated celiac disease, Dr. Adams said, adding that she advocates screening for celiac disease in all JIA patients.

She described a case involving a 6-year-old boy who presented with pain and swelling of the knee as well as morning stiffness. He had previously been treated for Lyme disease, and he had a 2-year history of headaches, behavioral problems, and poor growth, compared with his identical twin.

Based on physical and laboratory examinations (serology was negative for celiac disease) and after the young patient was referred to pediatric infectious disease and neurology specialties where he underwent lumbar puncture and brain MRI, the treatment focused on possible central nervous system Lyme disease. Although his joint complaints were resolved, he had persistent headaches, poor growth, and worsening transaminitis.

The boy tested negative for infectious and autoimmune hepatitis. An abdominal ultrasound showed fatty infiltration of the liver. Ultimately, the child was referred to a pediatric gastroenterologist. Work-up, including duodenal biopsy, showed findings that were consistent with celiac disease, and a gluten-free diet was initiated.

"On a gluten-free diet, the child’s headaches resolved, he had no recurrence of joint pain, he was growing and gaining weight, and he had no further behavioral issues," Dr. Adams said.

An early diagnosis of celiac disease in a JIA patient and early initiation of a gluten-free diet can prevent unnecessary treatment with NSAIDs, disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs, and anti–tumor necrosis factor agents. The patent can also avoid unnecessary imaging and joint injections.

Associations between celiac disease and adult rheumatoid arthritis/seronegative arthritides also exist, but are not as robust as that seen between celiac disease and JIA.

The coexistence of adult RA and positive celiac antibodies – including EmA (endomysial antibodies) and gliadin IgA – has been well described, but an association with biopsy-proven celiac disease has not borne out, Dr. Adams said.

The same is true in adult spondyloarthropathy.

It is possible that there are age-related differences in gluten tolerance or in the pathogenesis of arthritis and/or gut permeability that can explain the age-related differences, but this remains unclear, she noted.

As for celiac disease and myositis, the associations are well documented in both the pediatric rheumatology and pediatric gastroenterology literature, and also (although only more recently) in the adult literature.

Interestingly, a high prevalence of the DQAI*0501 allele is found in both diseases, Dr. Adams noted.

Because treatment of inflammatory myositis often requires significant use of glucocorticoids and sometimes additional immunosuppressive therapy, screening for celiac disease should be considered in myositis patients, she said, describing two cases involving young girls who were diagnosed with myositis and polymyositis, respectively. Both failed to respond adequately to prednisone/methotrexate, and both are doing well now on only a gluten-free diet after being diagnosed with celiac disease on biopsy.

Screen for celiac disease in patients with vague musculoskeletal complaints who don’t respond to treatment, she said. These are the patients with whom "you just don’t know what to do," she said, adding that these are the patients who don’t clearly have arthritis, whose symptoms are out of proportion to findings on examination, whose symptoms impact their participation in sports or other activities, and who fail to respond well to a number of treatments. Often these patients will be diagnosed with fibromyalgia – a diagnosis that is unusual in young patients and should raise concern about possible other causes, she added.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Aspirin and NSAIDs Raise Risk for Diverticulitis
MDedge Rheumatology

Related Articles