Microscopic Colitis and Celiac Disease: Sharing More than a Diagnostic Overlap
Author
Date
2024-07Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/11351/11937DOI
10.3390/nu16142233
ISSN
2072-6643
WOS
001277468700001
PMID
39064676
Abstract
Microscopic colitis (MC) is an emergent group of chronic inflammatory diseases of the colon, and celiac disease (CD) is a chronic gluten-induced immune-mediated enteropathy affecting the small bowel. We performed a narrative review to provide an overview regarding the relationship between both disorders, analyzing the most recent studies published at the epidemiological, clinical and pathophysiological levels. In fact, MC and CD are concomitantly prevalent in approximately 6% of the cases, mainly in the subset of refractory patients. Thus, physicians should screen refractory patients with CD against MC and vice versa. Both disorders share more than a simple epidemiological association, being multifactorial diseases involving innate and adaptive immune responses to known or unknown luminal factors based on a rather common genetic ground. Moreover, autoimmunity is a shared characteristic between the patients with MC and those with CD, with autoimmunity in the latter being quite well-established. Furthermore, CD and MC share some common clinical symptoms and risk factors and overlap with other gastrointestinal diseases, but some differences exist between both disorders. More studies are therefore needed to better understand the complex mechanisms involving the common pathogenetic ground contributing to the CD and MC epidemiological association.
Keywords
Autoimmunity; Celiac disease; Microscopic colitisBibliographic citation
González-Castro AM, Fernández-Bañares F, Zabana Y, Farago-Pérez G, Ortega-Barrionuevo J, Expósito E, et al. Microscopic Colitis and Celiac Disease: Sharing More than a Diagnostic Overlap. Nutrients. 2024 Jul;16(14):2233.
Audience
Professionals
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- HVH - Articles científics [4476]
- VHIR - Articles científics [1751]
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