1. The combination of clinical parameters and immunophenotyping of intraepithelial lymphocytes allows to assess disease severity in refractory celiac disease.
- Author
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Branchi F, Wiese JJ, Heldt C, Manna S, Dony V, Loddenkemper C, Bojarski C, Siegmund B, Schneider T, Daum S, Hummel M, Moos V, and Schumann M
- Subjects
- Humans, Immunophenotyping, Intestinal Mucosa pathology, Severity of Illness Index, Lymphocytes pathology, Celiac Disease complications, Intraepithelial Lymphocytes pathology
- Abstract
Background: Flow cytometry of intestinal lymphocytes is discussed to be a stronger predictor of enteropathy-associated T-cell lymphoma development in refractory celiac disease than T-cell clonality analysis., Aims: To investigate possible associations between clinical characteristics of refractory celiac disease patients and aberrant intraepithelial lymphocytes and to evaluate the accuracy of immunophenotyping for the identification of high-risk refractory celiac disease., Methods: Flow cytometry of isolated lymphocytes from duodenal biopsies of controls and celiac disease patients was performed and results were compared to clinical data., Results: Flow cytometry analysis was performed on 42 controls, 37 non-complicated celiac disease and 30 refractory celiac disease cases with or without T-cell receptor clonality. Elevated aberrant intraepithelial lymphocyte counts were significantly associated with severe malabsorption. A 15% cut-off (aberrant lymphocytes among all lymphocytes) had the best discriminatory ability to identify high-risk patients. However, this technique failed to identify some high-risk cases (sensitivity 63%, specificity 100%). The severity of malabsorption was added to the criteria for high-risk refractory celiac disease, improving the correct patients' allocation (sensitivity 100%, specificity 96%)., Conclusion: Immunophenotyping of aberrant intraepithelial lymphocytes is a good predictor for high-risk refractory celiac disease. Furthermore, adding the evaluation of malabsorption to the diagnostic assessment of refractory celiac disease optimizes accuracy., (Copyright © 2022. Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
- Published
- 2022
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