Yes, inflammatory bowel disease and celiac disease are linked

McMaster University researchers have established a connection between inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and celiac disease.

By Tina Depko, Health Sciences May 13, 2020

Maria Ines Pinto-Sanchez, left, and Elena Verdu are scientists in the Farncombe Family Digestive Health Research Institute at McMaster University. Photos by Georgia Kirkos

Experts Featured In This Story

Maria Pinto-Sanchez
Maria Pinto-Sanchez

Associate Professor

See Profile
Elena Verdu
Elena Verdu

Professor

See Profile

McMaster University researchers have established a connection between inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and celiac disease.

A systematic review and meta-analysis at the Farncombe Family Digestive Health Research Institute at McMaster in collaboration with the Society for the Study of Celiac Disease has determined there is a nine-fold increased risk of having IBD for patients with a previous diagnosis of celiac disease. Similarly, the risk for celiac disease is increased in IBD patients, though to a smaller extent.

The details were published today in Gastroenterology.

“Clinicians have always suspected that IBD and celiac disease may be linked, however a clear association was never established,” said first study author Maria Ines Pinto-Sanchez, associate professor of medicine and member of the Farncombe Family Digestive Health Research Institute at McMaster. She is a gastroenterologist with Hamilton Health Sciences.

“This is important, as failure to diagnose one or the other condition could compromise proper response to available treatments. It also raises questions on screening for the other disease in a patient already diagnosed with either IBD or celiac disease.”

IBD and celiac disease are chronic and disabling intestinal conditions affecting many Canadians as Canada has one of the highest frequencies of IBD in the world. Both diseases share similar risk factors and their prevalence has increased in the past years.

While the exact cause of IBD is unknown, it is accepted that infections, genes and other environmental factors are involved. Celiac disease affects 1 in 100 Canadians, and its main environmental trigger is dietary gluten, but specific genes are required to develop the condition.

The researchers identified 9,800 studies and included 65 studies in their analysis. Of those, 30 studies included control groups with a total of 13.6 million participants, including: 43,000 celiac patients, 166,000 IBD patients (39,000 Crohn’s, 56,000 ulcerative colitis, and 3,000 indeterminate colitis patients), and 13.4 million controls.

The studies were published between 1978 and 2019. Forty-three studies were conducted in adults, 12 studies in children, and 9 studies in all ages. The majority of the studies were in Europe, followed by North America and Asia.

The researchers suggest the next step is to determine whether testing for the diseases is cost-effective and beneficial to patients.

“Our review has confirmed that there is a strong association between celiac disease and IBD, but at this time, it is unclear whether screening of IBD should be performed in celiac disease and vice versa,” said corresponding study author Elena Verdu, professor of medicine and scientist of the Farncombe Family Digestive Health Research Institute at McMaster.

“More studies into the association of IBD and celiac disease are needed, as this could lead to screening and therapeutic interventions to improve patient outcomes.”

The study was funded by the Society for the Study of Celiac Disease.

A man in a suit and a beaded medallion stands in a wood-panelled area, with tree leaves behind him.

Q&A with Tristan Bomberry, medical student and health researcher

Tristan Bomberry on Indigenous health, the importance of bringing community perspectives into the research process, and work that's rooted in relationships.
A smiling woman doing a lunge on a yoga mat, holding hand weights.

Consistency over perfection, new resistance-training guidelines say

'The best resistance training program is the one you’ll actually stick with.'
A pregnant person's hands cradle their baby bump.

Nearly half of severe pregnancy complications happen before labour or after birth and are not monitored

While monitoring typically focuses on complications during labour and delivery, researchers found 45 per cent of dangerous events take place outside the delivery room, during pregnancy or in the six weeks postpartum.