1. Enterovirus Infections Are Associated With the Development of Celiac Disease in a Birth Cohort Study
- Author
-
Maarit Oikarinen, Leena Puustinen, Jussi Lehtonen, Leena Hakola, Satu Simell, Jorma Toppari, Jorma Ilonen, Riitta Veijola, Suvi M. Virtanen, Mikael Knip, Heikki Hyöty, HUS Children and Adolescents, Children's Hospital, University of Helsinki, Helsinki University Hospital Area, CAMM - Research Program for Clinical and Molecular Metabolism, Faculty of Medicine, Tampere University, BioMediTech, Health Sciences, Tays Research Services, Department of Paediatrics, and Department of Clinical Microbiology
- Subjects
Male ,Enterovirus Infections ,Time Factors ,Tissue transglutaminase ,viruses ,Disease ,medicine.disease_cause ,Antibodies, Viral ,Immunoenzyme Techniques ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Finnish Diabetes Prediction and Prevention study ,Genotype ,Immunology and Allergy ,enzyme immunoassay (EIA) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Child ,Enterovirus ,Original Research ,11832 Microbiology and virology ,tissue transglutaminase autoantibodies ,biology ,enterovirus ,Prognosis ,3. Good health ,Child, Preschool ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Female ,Antibody ,lcsh:Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,Immunology ,3121 Internal medicine ,Risk Assessment ,Virus ,03 medical and health sciences ,GTP-Binding Proteins ,medicine ,Humans ,Protein Glutamine gamma Glutamyltransferase 2 ,Serologic Tests ,Autoantibodies ,conditional logistic regression ,Transglutaminases ,business.industry ,Autoantibody ,3141 Health care science ,Celiac Disease ,3121 General medicine, internal medicine and other clinical medicine ,Case-Control Studies ,biology.protein ,3111 Biomedicine ,business ,lcsh:RC581-607 ,celiac disease - Abstract
Enterovirus and adenovirus infections have been linked to the development of celiac disease. We evaluated this association in children who developed biopsy-proven celiac disease (N = 41) during prospective observation starting from birth, and in control children (N = 53) matched for the calendar time of birth, sex, and HLA-DQ genotype. Enterovirus and adenovirus infections were diagnosed by seroconversions in virus antibodies in longitudinally collected sera using EIA. Enterovirus infections were more frequent in case children before the appearance of celiac disease-associated tissue transglutaminase autoantibodies compared to the corresponding period in control children (OR 6.3, 95% CI 1.8-22.3; p = 0.005). No difference was observed in the frequency of adenovirus infections. The findings suggest that enterovirus infections may contribute to the process leading to celiac disease. publishedVersion
- Published
- 2020