Clinical and Developmental Immunology (Jan 2012)

Reintroduction of Gluten Following Flour Transamidation in Adult Celiac Patients: A Randomized, Controlled Clinical Study

  • Giuseppe Mazzarella,
  • Virginia M. Salvati,
  • Gaetano Iaquinto,
  • Rosita Stefanile,
  • Federica Capobianco,
  • Diomira Luongo,
  • Paolo Bergamo,
  • Francesco Maurano,
  • Nicola Giardullo,
  • Basilio Malamisura,
  • Mauro Rossi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/329150
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2012

Abstract

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A lifelong gluten-free diet (GFD) is mandatory for celiac disease (CD) but has poor compliance, justifying novel strategies. We found that wheat flour transamidation inhibited IFN-γ secretion by intestinal T cells from CD patients. Herein, the primary endpoint was to evaluate the ability of transamidated gluten to maintain GFD CD patients in clinical remission. Secondary endpoints were efficacy in prevention of the inflammatory response and safety at the kidney level, where reaction products are metabolized. In a randomized single blinded, controlled 90-day trial, 47 GFD CD patients received 3.7 g/day of gluten from nontransamidated (12) or transamidated (35) flour. On day 15, 75% and 37% of patients in the control and experimental groups, respectively, showed clinical relapse (𝑃=0.04) whereas intestinal permeability was mainly altered in the control group (50% versus 20%, 𝑃=0.06). On day 90, 0 controls and 14 patients in the experimental group completed the challenge with no variation of antitransglutaminase IgA (𝑃=0.63), Marsh-Oberhuber grading (𝑃=0.08), or intestinal IFN-γ mRNA (𝑃>0.05). Creatinine clearance did not vary after 90 days of treatment (𝑃=0.46). In conclusion, transamidated gluten reduced the number of clinical relapses in challenged patients with no changes of baseline values for serological/mucosal CD markers and an unaltered kidney function.