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The use of a home rapid test for the detection of both gluten immunogenic peptides (GIP) in urine and immunoglobulin A (IgA) anti tissue transglutaminase (anti-tTG) antibodies in blood may contribute to the early detection of volunteers who suffer celiac disease (CD), a highly under-diagnosed disorder. Patients with positive results could inform their doctors in order to accelerate the diagnosis, contribute to symptoms control and improve their quality of life.
This observational, cross-sectional study with no interventions applied in subjects consists on a single group of volunteers between 2 and 18 years old. They will be given an informed consent which must be signed by them or their parents/legal guardians, a Celiac Symptoms Index (CSI) questionnaire and the sample collection material required on the testing day. Urine samples will be collected and analysed in situ or alternatively they will be stored and analyzed after at the laboratory. Blood samples will be collected and analyzed in situ the testing day.
The main outcome is to determine the prevalence of CD through mass screening within the pediatric and adolescent population in order to provide an early diagnosis and avoid long-term consequences which are suffered by untreated patients. As an international innovation, misdiagnosis (false negatives) because of an insufficient gluten intake are expected to be detected, thus the use of GIP detection in urine will confirm gluten ingestion at the diagnosis. Volunteers with a confirmed diagnosis of CD could be monitored by their doctors to corroborate whether a gluten-free diet improves their quality of life.
Full description
Hypothesis: the use of a home rapid test for the detection of both gluten immunogenic peptides (GIP) in urine and IgA anti-tTG antibodies in blood may contribute to the early detection of volunteers who suffer celiac disease (CD), a highly under-diagnosed disorder. Patients with positive results could inform their doctors in order to accelerate the diagnosis, contribute to symptoms control and improve their quality of life.
Objectives:
Primary objective: to perform a mass screening in the pediatric and adolescent population (2 - 18 years old) in order to assess the prevalence of the CD providing early diagnosis of possible patients through 1 - Detection of IgA anti-tTG antibodies present in blood (to be measured by home rapid tests); 2 - Detection of GIP in urine (to be measured in situ or at a central laboratory).
Specific objectives: 1- To determine the prevalence of CD, particularly in children between 2 and 18 years old; 2 - To detect possible hidden CD cases, avoiding future irreversible damages by a late detection of this pathology such as growth impairment, decalcification, neurotoxicity or risks of suffering other autoimmune diseases; 3 - To detect misdiagnosis (false negatives) because of an insufficient gluten intake, as an international innovation.
Study design: this observational, cross-sectional study with no interventions applied in subjects consists of a single group of volunteers between 2 and 18 years old. They will be given an informed consent which must be signed by them or their parents/legal guardians, a Celiac Symptoms Index (CSI) questionnaire, a short clinical questionnaire and the sample collection material required on the testing day. Urine samples will be collected and analysed in situ or alternatively they will be stored and analyzed after at the laboratory. Blood samples will be collected and analyzed in situ the testing day.
Study participants: volunteers from the pediatric and adolescent population between 2 and 18 years old. Gluten consumption previous to testing is an innovative requirement in order to validate the IgA anti-tTG antibodies rapid test.
Study procedure:
Number of participants: a minimum of 1000 volunteers would be needed to achieve a conclusive study in order to determine at least 10 cases of CD. The calculation was made according to CD's prevalence of 1% described by several studies.
Measurements: 1- Laboratory rapid test (iVYCHECK GIP Urine, Biomedal S.L., Seville, Spain) for GIP determination in urine samples and immunochromatographic rapid test (CeliacDetect, Biomedal S.L., Spain) for IgA anti-tTG antibodies detection in blood; 2- CD related symptoms (CSI questionnaire). Urine samples will be analysed in situ or stored and analyzed later at a central laboratory (Biomedal S.L., Seville, Spain).
Statistical analysis: the data obtained in the study will be collected in a data base created with this purpose. Variables are tabulated through the IBM SPSS Statistics V25.0 program from International Business Machines (IBM) (Armonk, New York, USA). Different study variables will be considered: 1 - related to patients (age, gender, parent's study level); 2 - related to the "Celiac symptoms index" questionnaire (presence or not of previous symptomatology); 3 - related to samples (GIP presence in urine and IgA anti-tTG antibodies presence in blood). Each test's result will be considered as significant if the value p<0,05 and very significant if p<0,01. A confidence of 95% will be taken for intervals. When p>0,05, the result will be considered as non-significant.
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1,000 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Carolina Sousa Martín; Ángel Cebolla Ramírez
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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