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Emergence of an adaptive immune paradigm to explain celiac disease: a perspective on new evidence and implications for future interventions and diagnosis

Authors :
Robert P Anderson
Source :
Expert Review of Clinical Immunology. 18:75-91
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Informa UK Limited, 2022.

Abstract

Introduction Recent patient studies have shown that gluten-free diet is less effective in treating celiac disease than previously believed, and additionally patients remain vulnerable to gluten-induced acute symptoms and systemic cytokine release. Safe and effective pharmacological adjuncts to gluten-free diet are in preclinical and clinical development. Clear understanding of the pathogenesis of celiac disease is critical for drug target identification, establishing efficacy endpoints and to develop non-invasive biomarkers suitable to monitor and potentially diagnose celiac disease. Areas covered The role and clinical effects of CD4+ T cells directed against deamidated gluten in the context of an "adaptive immune paradigm" are reviewed. Alternative hypotheses of gluten toxicity are discussed and contrasted. In the context of recent patient studies, implications of the adaptive immune paradigm for future strategies to prevent, diagnose, and treat celiac disease are outlined. Expert opinion Effective therapeutics for celiac disease are likely to be approved and necessitate a variety of new clinical instruments and tests to stratify patient need, monitor remission, and confirm diagnosis in uncertain cases. Sensitive assessments of CD4+ T cells specific for deamidated gluten are likely to play a central role in clinical management, and to facilitate research and pharmaceutical development.

Details

ISSN :
17448409 and 1744666X
Volume :
18
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Expert Review of Clinical Immunology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....904372520c5dc8e110c1371708315046
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/1744666x.2021.2006636