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Featured researches published by Katri Kaukinen.


Gut | 2013

The Oslo definitions for coeliac disease and related terms

Jonas F. Ludvigsson; Daniel A. Leffler; Julio C. Bai; Federico Biagi; Alessio Fasano; Peter H. Green; Marios Hadjivassiliou; Katri Kaukinen; Ciaran P. Kelly; J.N. Leonard; Knut E.A. Lundin; Joseph A. Murray; David S. Sanders; Marjorie M. Walker; Fabiana Zingone; Carolina Ciacci

Objective The literature suggests a lack of consensus on the use of terms related to coeliac disease (CD) and gluten. Design A multidisciplinary task force of 16 physicians from seven countries used the electronic database PubMed to review the literature for CD-related terms up to January 2011. Teams of physicians then suggested a definition for each term, followed by feedback of these definitions through a web survey on definitions, discussions during a meeting in Oslo and phone conferences. In addition to ‘CD’, the following descriptors of CD were evaluated (in alphabetical order): asymptomatic, atypical, classical, latent, non-classical, overt, paediatric classical, potential, refractory, silent, subclinical, symptomatic, typical, CD serology, CD autoimmunity, genetically at risk of CD, dermatitis herpetiformis, gluten, gluten ataxia, gluten intolerance, gluten sensitivity and gliadin-specific antibodies. Results CD was defined as ‘a chronic small intestinal immune-mediated enteropathy precipitated by exposure to dietary gluten in genetically predisposed individuals’. Classical CD was defined as ‘CD presenting with signs and symptoms of malabsorption. Diarrhoea, steatorrhoea, weight loss or growth failure is required.’ ‘Gluten-related disorders’ is the suggested umbrella term for all diseases triggered by gluten and the term gluten intolerance should not to be used. Other definitions are presented in the paper. Conclusion This paper presents the Oslo definitions for CD-related terms.


BMC Medicine | 2012

Spectrum of gluten-related disorders: consensus on new nomenclature and classification

Anna Sapone; Julio C. Bai; Carolina Ciacci; Jernej Dolinsek; Peter H. Green; Marios Hadjivassiliou; Katri Kaukinen; Kamran Rostami; David S. Sanders; Michael Schumann; Reiner Ullrich; Danilo Villalta; Umberto Volta; Carlo Catassi; Alessio Fasano

A decade ago celiac disease was considered extremely rare outside Europe and, therefore, was almost completely ignored by health care professionals. In only 10 years, key milestones have moved celiac disease from obscurity into the popular spotlight worldwide. Now we are observing another interesting phenomenon that is generating great confusion among health care professionals. The number of individuals embracing a gluten-free diet (GFD) appears much higher than the projected number of celiac disease patients, fueling a global market of gluten-free products approaching


Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2007

Increasing prevalence of coeliac disease over time.

Sini Lohi; K. Mustalahti; Katri Kaukinen; Kaija Laurila; Pekka Collin; H. Rissanen; O. Lohi; E. Bravi; M. Gasparin; Antti Reunanen; Markku Mäki

2.5 billion (US) in global sales in 2010. This trend is supported by the notion that, along with celiac disease, other conditions related to the ingestion of gluten have emerged as health care concerns. This review will summarize our current knowledge about the three main forms of gluten reactions: allergic (wheat allergy), autoimmune (celiac disease, dermatitis herpetiformis and gluten ataxia) and possibly immune-mediated (gluten sensitivity), and also outline pathogenic, clinical and epidemiological differences and propose new nomenclature and classifications.


Gut | 2014

Diagnosis and management of adult coeliac disease: guidelines from the British Society of Gastroenterology

Jonas F. Ludvigsson; Julio C. Bai; Federico Biagi; Timothy R. Card; Carolina Ciacci; Paul J. Ciclitira; Peter H. Green; Marios Hadjivassiliou; Anne Holdoway; David A. van Heel; Katri Kaukinen; Daniel A. Leffler; J.N. Leonard; Knut E.A. Lundin; Norma McGough; Mike Davidson; Joseph A. Murray; Gillian L Swift; Marjorie M. Walker; Fabiana Zingone; David S. Sanders

Background  The number of coeliac disease diagnoses has increased in the recent past and according to screening studies, the total prevalence of the disorder is around 1%.


Laboratory Investigation | 2005

Inflammatory processes have differential effects on claudins 2, 3 and 4 in colonic epithelial cells

Shyam Prasad; Roberto Mingrino; Katri Kaukinen; Katherine L Hayes; Robert M. Powell; Thomas T. MacDonald; Jane E. Collins

A multidisciplinary panel of 18 physicians and 3 non-physicians from eight countries (Sweden, UK, Argentina, Australia, Italy, Finland, Norway and the USA) reviewed the literature on diagnosis and management of adult coeliac disease (CD). This paper presents the recommendations of the British Society of Gastroenterology. Areas of controversies were explored through phone meetings and web surveys. Nine working groups examined the following areas of CD diagnosis and management: classification of CD; genetics and immunology; diagnostics; serology and endoscopy; follow-up; gluten-free diet; refractory CD and malignancies; quality of life; novel treatments; patient support; and screening for CD.


Gastroenterology | 2009

Diagnosing Mild Enteropathy Celiac Disease: A Randomized, Controlled Clinical Study

Kalle Kurppa; Pekka Collin; Mervi Viljamaa; Katri Haimila; Päivi Saavalainen; Jukka Partanen; Kaija Laurila; Heini Huhtala; Kaija Paasikivi; Markku Mäki; Katri Kaukinen

Claudin proteins comprise a recently described family of tight junction proteins that differentially regulate paracellular permeability. Since other tight junction proteins show alterations in distribution or expression in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) we assessed expression of claudins (CL) 2, 3 and 4 in IBD. CL 2 was strongly expressed along the inflamed crypt epithelium, whilst absent or barely detectable in normal colon. In contrast, CL 3 and 4 were present throughout normal colonic epithelium and were reduced or redistributed in the diseased surface epithelium. In a T84-cell culture model of the gut barrier, paracellular permeability decreased with time after plating and correlated with a marked decrease in the expression of CL 2. Addition of IFNγ/TNFα led to further decreases in CL 2 and 3, the redistrbution of CL 4 and a marked increase in paracellular permeability. Conversely, IL-13 dramatically increased CL 2, with little effect on CL 3 or 4, but also resulted in increased paracellular permeability. Expression of CL 2 did not correlate with proliferation or junctional reorganisation after calcium ion depletion. Re-expression of CL 2 in response to IL-13 was inhibited by phophatidylinositol 3 kinase inhibitor, LY294002, which also restored the ion permeability to previous levels. CL 2 expression could be stimulated in the absence of IL-13 by activation of phospho-Akt in the phophatidylinositol 3 kinase pathway. These results suggest that INFγ/TNFα and IL-13 have differential effects on CL 2, 3 and 4 in tight junctions, which may lead to increased permeability via different mechanisms.


European Journal of Gastroenterology & Hepatology | 2005

Antiendomysial and antihuman recombinant tissue transglutaminase antibodies in the diagnosis of coeliac disease: a biopsy-proven European multicentre study.

Pekka Collin; Katri Kaukinen; Harald Vogelsang; Ilma Rita Korponay-Szabó; Rudolf Sommer; Elisabeth Schreier; Umberto Volta; Alessandro Granito; Lorenza Veronesi; Françoise Mascart; Annick Ocmant; Anneli Ivarsson; Carina Lagerqvist; Annemarie Bürgin-Wolff; Faruk Hadziselimovic; Raoul I. Furlano; Marc A. Sidler; Chris J. Mulder; Marije S. Goerres; M. Luisa Mearin; Maarten K. Ninaber; Eivind Gudmand-Høyer; Elisabetta Fabiani; Carlo Catassi; Helena Tidlund; Lisbeth Alainentalo; Markku Mäki

BACKGROUND & AIMS The diagnostic criteria for celiac disease require small-bowel mucosal villous atrophy with crypt hyperplasia (Marsh III). However, mucosal damage develops gradually and patients may evince clinical symptoms before histologic changes appear. Endomysial antibodies are specific in predicting forthcoming villous atrophy. We hypothesized that patients with mild enteropathy but positive endomysial antibodies benefit from a gluten-free diet (GFD) similarly to patients with more severe enteropathy. METHODS Small-bowel endoscopy together with clinical evaluations was performed in all together 70 consecutive adults with positive endomysial antibodies. Of these, 23 had only mild enteropathy (Marsh I-II) and they were randomized either to continue on a gluten-containing diet or start a GFD. After 1 year, clinical, serologic, and histologic evaluations were repeated. A total of 47 participants had small-bowel mucosal lesions compatible with celiac disease (Marsh III), and these served as disease controls. RESULTS In the gluten-containing diet group (Marsh I-II) the small-bowel mucosal villous architecture deteriorated in all participants, and the symptoms and abnormal antibody titers persisted. In contrast, in the GFD group (Marsh I-II) the symptoms were alleviated, antibody titers decreased, and mucosal inflammation diminished equally to celiac controls (Marsh III). When the trial was completed, all participants chose to continue on a life-long GFD. CONCLUSIONS Patients with endomysial antibodies benefit from a GFD regardless of the degree of enteropathy. The diagnostic criteria for celiac disease need re-evaluation: endomysial antibody positivity without atrophy belongs to the spectrum of genetic gluten intolerance, and warrants dietary treatment.


The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 2002

HLA-DQ typing in the diagnosis of celiac disease

Katri Kaukinen; Jukka Partanen; Markku Mäki; Pekka Collin

Objective To investigate the value of serum antitissue transglutaminase IgA antibodies (IgA-TTG) and IgA antiendomysial antibodies (IgA-EMA) in the diagnosis of coeliac disease in cohorts from different geographical areas in Europe. The setting allowed a further comparison between the antibody results and the conventional small-intestinal histology. Methods A total of 144 cases with coeliac disease [median age 19.5 years (range 0.9-81.4)], and 127 disease controls [median age 29.2 years (range 0.5-79.0)], were recruited, on the basis of biopsy, from 13 centres in nine countries. All biopsy specimens were re-evaluated and classified blindly a second time by two investigators. IgA-TTG were determined by ELISA with human recombinant antigen and IgA-EMA by an immunofluorescence test with human umbilical cord as antigen. Results The quality of the biopsy specimens was not acceptable in 29 (10.7%) of 271 cases and a reliable judgement could not be made, mainly due to poor orientation of the samples. The primary clinical diagnosis and the second classification of the biopsy specimens were divergent in nine cases, and one patient was initially enrolled in the wrong group. Thus, 126 coeliac patients and 106 controls, verified by biopsy, remained for final analysis. The sensitivity of IgA-TTG was 94% and IgA-EMA 89%, the specificity was 99% and 98%, respectively. Conclusions Serum IgA-TTG measurement is effective and at least as good as IgA-EMA in the identification of coeliac disease. Due to a high percentage of poor histological specimens, the diagnosis of coeliac disease should not depend only on biopsy, but in addition the clinical picture and serology should be considered.


Gut | 2006

Endomysial antibody-negative coeliac disease: clinical characteristics and intestinal autoantibody deposits

Teea Salmi; Pekka Collin; Ilma Rita Korponay-Szabó; Kaija Laurila; Jukka Partanen; Heini Huhtala; Róbert Király; Laszlo Lorand; Timo Reunala; Markku Mäki; Katri Kaukinen

OBJECTIVE:More than 95% of celiac patients share the major histocompatibility complex II class human leukocyte antigen (HLA) DQ2 or DQ8 haplotype; patients negative for both types are unlikely to suffer from celiac disease. Our aim was to investigate whether HLA-DQ2 and -DQ8 typing is helpful when diagnosis is uncertain because of the absence of unequivocal small bowel villous atrophy.METHODS:HLA-DQ2 and -DQ8 typing was carried out in 59 patients evincing nondiagnostic small bowel mucosal lesion or positive celiac serology, and in 17 patients maintaining a gluten-free diet without biopsy-proven celiac disease. HLA findings were compared to small bowel mucosal morphology; intraepithelial lymphocytes; and serum endomysial (EmA), reticulin, tissue transglutaminase (anti-tTG) and gliadin antibodies.RESULTS:Of the 59 patients evincing only minor small bowel mucosal changes or positive celiac disease serology, 22 (37%) were negative for DQ2 and DQ8. All EmA-positive patients had celiac-type HLA, but antireticulin antibody, anti-tTg, and antigliadin antibody were also present in HLA-DQ2– and -DQ8–negative individuals. Eleven of 17 patients (65%) observing a gluten-free diet before small bowel biopsy did not share celiac-type HLA. None of the 17 had apparent villous atrophy. Serum EmA and anti-tTG were negative in all. HLA-DQ typing is less expensive than follow-up biopsy in the exclusion of celiac disease.CONCLUSIONS:HLA-DQ2 and -DQ8 determination is useful in exclusion, probably lifelong, of celiac disease in individuals with an equivocal small bowel histological finding. The low specificity of this test must, however, be borne in mind.


Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2006

Immunoglobulin A autoantibodies against transglutaminase 2 in the small intestinal mucosa predict forthcoming coeliac disease

Teea Salmi; Pekka Collin; Otso Järvinen; Katri Haimila; Jukka Partanen; Kaija Laurila; Ilma Rita Korponay-Szabó; Heini Huhtala; Timo Reunala; Markku Mäki; Katri Kaukinen

Background: Some patients with untreated coeliac disease are negative for serum endomysial autoantibodies (EmA) targeted against transglutaminase 2 (TG2). Aims: To evaluate the clinical and histological features of EmA-negative coeliac disease, and to examine whether EmA-equivalent autoantibodies against TG2 can be seen in the small-bowel mucosa when absent in serum. Patients: Serum EmA was studied in 177 biopsy-proved specimens from adult patients with coeliac disease. 20 patients with intestinal diseases served as non-coeliac controls; three had autoimmune enteropathy with villous atrophy. Methods: Clinical manifestations, small-bowel mucosal morphology, intraepithelial inflammation and TG2-specific extracellular immunoglobulin A (IgA) deposits were investigated in both serum EmA-negative and EmA-positive patients. Results: 22 patients with IgA-competent coeliac disease were negative for serum EmA. Three of these had small-bowel lymphoma. Patients with EmA-negative coeliac disease were older, had abdominal symptoms more often, and the density of γδ+ intraepithelial lymphocytes in their intestinal mucosa was lower than in EmA-positive patients; otherwise the histology was similar. All serum EmA-negative patients with coeliac disease, but none of the disease controls, had gluten-dependent mucosal IgA deposits alongside TG2 in the small-bowel mucosal specimens. In vivo deposited IgA was shown to be TG2-specific by its ability to bind recombinant TG2. Conclusions: Negative serum EmA might be associated with advanced coeliac disease. TG2-targeted autoantibodies were deposited in the small-bowel mucosa even when absent in serum. This finding can be used in the diagnosis of seronegative coeliac disease when the histology is equivocal. It may also be helpful in the differential diagnosis between autoimmune enteropathy and coeliac disease.

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