» Articles » PMID: 25248819

Experimental Hookworm Infection and Gluten Microchallenge Promote Tolerance in Celiac Disease

Overview
Date 2014 Sep 25
PMID 25248819
Citations 84
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Background: Celiac disease (CeD) is a common gluten-sensitive autoimmune enteropathy. A gluten-free diet is an effective treatment, but compliance is demanding; hence, new treatment strategies for CeD are required.

Objective: Parasitic helminths hold promise for treating inflammatory disorders, so we examined the influence of experimental hookworm infection on the predicted outcomes of escalating gluten challenges in CeD subjects.

Methods: A 52-week study was conducted involving 12 adults with diet-managed CeD. Subjects were inoculated with 20 Necator americanus larvae, and escalating gluten challenges consumed as pasta were subsequently administered: (1) 10 to 50 mg for 12 weeks (microchallenge); (2) 25 mg daily + 1 g twice weekly for 12 weeks (GC-1g); and (3) 3 g daily (60-75 straws of spaghetti) for 2 weeks (GC-3g). Symptomatic, serologic, and histological outcomes evaluated gluten toxicity. Regulatory and inflammatory T cell populations in blood and mucosa were examined.

Results: Two gluten-intolerant subjects were withdrawn after microchallenge. Ten completed GC-1g, 8 of whom enrolled in and completed GC-3g.

Primary Outcomes: median villous height-to-crypt depth ratios (2.60-2.63; P = .98) did not decrease as predicted after GC-1g, and the mean IgA-tissue transglutaminase titers declined, contrary to the predicted rise after GC-3g.

Secondary Outcomes: quality of life scores improved (46.3-40.6; P = .05); celiac symptom indices (24.3-24.3; P = .53), intra-epithelial lymphocyte percentages (32.5-35.0; P = .47), and Marsh scores were unchanged by gluten challenge. Intestinal T cells expressing IFNγ were reduced following hookworm infection (23.9%-11.5%; P = .04), with corresponding increases in CD4(+) Foxp3(+) regulatory T cells (0.19%-1.12%; P = .001).

Conclusions: Necator americanus and gluten microchallenge promoted tolerance and stabilized or improved all tested indices of gluten toxicity in CeD subjects.

Citing Articles

Beyond gluten-free diet: a critical perspective on phase 2 trials on non-dietary pharmacological therapies for coeliac disease.

Scalvini D, Scarcella C, Mantica G, Bartolotta E, Maimaris S, Fazzino E Front Nutr. 2025; 11():1501817.

PMID: 39839296 PMC: 11748180. DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2024.1501817.


Anti-Inflammatory Effects of Helminth-Derived Products: Potential Applications and Challenges in Diabetes Mellitus Management.

Zhu Y, Chen X, Zheng H, Ma Q, Chen K, Li H J Inflamm Res. 2025; 17:11789-11812.

PMID: 39749005 PMC: 11694023. DOI: 10.2147/JIR.S493374.


Coeliac Disease in Children-A Clinical Review Including Novel Treatment Agents.

Corlett C, Rodrigues A, Ravikumara M Medicina (Kaunas). 2024; 60(10).

PMID: 39459437 PMC: 11509383. DOI: 10.3390/medicina60101650.


Geohelminths: Use in the Treatment of Selected Human Diseases.

Szuba M, Stachera W, Piwko A, Misiak M, Rutkevich R, Sota M Pathogens. 2024; 13(8).

PMID: 39204303 PMC: 11356798. DOI: 10.3390/pathogens13080703.


Controlled human hookworm infection remodels plasmacytoid dendritic cells and regulatory T cells towards profiles seen in natural infections in endemic areas.

Manurung M, Sonnet F, Hoogerwerf M, Janse J, Kruize Y, Bes-Roeleveld L Nat Commun. 2024; 15(1):5960.

PMID: 39013877 PMC: 11252261. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-50313-0.