Alpha gliadin antibody levels: a serological test for coeliac disease.

The diagnostic value in coeliac disease of circulating antibodies to casein, crude gliadin, and alpha gliadin was assessed using an adaption of the enzyme linked immunosorbent assay system. alpha Gliadin was the only antigen which consistently separated 26 patients with untreated coeliac disease from 26 normal controls and 13 patients with chronic inflammatory bowel disease. The mean assay index for the 26 patients was 3.1 (SD 1.2) compared with 1.05 (0.5) for the normal controls and 1.1 (0.6) for patients with chronic inflammatory bowel disease. The alpha gliadin antibody levels of six patients with coeliac disease who had maintained a gluten free diet for at least two years were not significantly higher than normal (1.0 (0.4)). The validity of the test was determined in 90 consecutive patients who were being investigated for the presence of coeliac disease. Levels of alpha gliadin antibody were raised in 36 out of 44 patients found to have histologically proved coeliac disease and in six out of 46 subjects whose jejunal mucosa was normal. Serial alpha gliadin concentrations were measured in 12 patients with coeliac disease who had repeat jejunal biopsies performed six months after starting a gluten free diet. The levels of antibody fell in seven of the eight patients whose jejunal mucosa improved on maintaining the diet. They remained raised in four patients who did not adhere to the diet and whose mucosa did not improve. Although a test measuring alpha gliadin antibodies is unlikely to replace jejunal biopsy in the diagnosis of coeliac disease it may be useful in screening for the disease among outpatients.

[1]  E. Thorsby,et al.  SUPPRESSOR-CELL ACTIVITY IN COELIAC DISEASE , 1985, The Lancet.

[2]  P. Howdle,et al.  Are all gliadins toxic in coeliac disease? An in vitro study of alpha, beta, gamma, and w gliadins. , 1984, Scandinavian journal of gastroenterology.

[3]  C. Feighery,et al.  The specificity of wheat protein reactivity in coeliac disease. , 1983, Scandinavian journal of gastroenterology.

[4]  T. Reunala,et al.  IgA ANTIGLIADIN ANTIBODIES: A MARKER OF MUCOSAL DAMAGE IN CHILDHOOD COELIAC DISEASE , 1983, The Lancet.

[5]  A. Ferguson,et al.  Changes in clinical features of coeliac disease in adults in Edinburgh and the Lothians 1960-79. , 1983, British medical journal.

[6]  R. Coombs,et al.  Wheat gliadin fractions and other cereal antigens reactive with antibodies in the sera of coeliac patients. , 1982, Clinical and experimental immunology.

[7]  C. Feighery,et al.  Cellular response to alpha-gliadin in untreated coeliac disease. , 1982, Gut.

[8]  E. Holborow,et al.  IgA anti-gliadin antibodies in coeliac disease. , 1981, Clinical and experimental immunology.

[9]  P. Ciclitira,et al.  Serum antibodies (measured by MRSPAH) to alcohol-soluble gliadins in adult coeliac patients. , 1981, Journal of immunological methods.

[10]  R. Levinsky,et al.  IMMUNE COMPLEXES CONTAINING FOOD PROTEINS IN NORMAL AND ATOPIC SUBJECTS AFTER ORAL CHALLENGE AND EFFECT OF SODIUM CROMOGLYCATE ON ANTIGEN ABSORPTION , 1979, The Lancet.

[11]  T. Feltkamp,et al.  Antibodies to gluten and reticulin in gastrointestinal diseases. , 1978, Clinical and experimental immunology.

[12]  T. Feltkamp,et al.  Wheat grains: a substrate for the determination of gluten antibodies in serum of gluten-sensitive patients. , 1977, Journal of immunological methods.

[13]  ELISA: a Replacement for Radioimmunoassay? , 1976, The Lancet.

[14]  C. Mietens [Immunological aspects of coeliac disease (author's transl)]. , 1973, Padiatrie und Padologie.

[15]  M. Kendall,et al.  GLUTEN SUBFRACTIONS IN CŒLIAC DISEASE , 1972 .

[16]  M. Kendall,et al.  Gluten subfractions in coeliac disease. , 1972, Lancet.

[17]  A. Ferguson,et al.  Precipitins to Dietary Proteins in Serum and Upper Intestinal Secretions of Coeliac Children , 1972, British medical journal.

[18]  J. Walker-Smith,et al.  Immunoglobulins and dietary protein antibodies in childhood coeliac disease. , 1970, Gut.

[19]  P. Immonen 47. Precipitins to Cow's Milk and Wheat Proteins in Gastrointestinal Disorders , 1965 .

[20]  D. Liebowitz,et al.  SIGNIFICANCE OF ANTIBODIES TO DIETARY PROTEINS IN THE SERUMS OF PATIENTS WITH NONTROPICAL SPRUE. , 1964, The New England journal of medicine.