A continuing flow of new scientific developments concerning coeliac disease in the last decade asks for the formulation of a new concept of pathophysiology and clinical approach of the coeliac condition. Immunogenetic studies have shown a correlation of the disease to the HLA region on the short arm of chromosome 6. Immunological research has led to the concept of a T-cell driven immunologic response of the small intestine, with the identification of highly sensitive and specific antibodies, and in addition the understanding of the histopathology of coeliac disease has changed dramatically, initiated by the proposition of a spectrum of gluten sensitive enteropathy by Marsh in 1992. Clinical studies report a significant change in patient characteristics and epidemiology. The incidence of the disease has shifted to a majority of adult coeliacs and the disease may present with less severe symptoms of malabsorption while screening studies suggest an overall prevalence of up to 1 in 200-300. In the present paper (an update on histopathology) we specifically describe the work of our group in Arnhem, concerning the identification and validation of the spectrum of intestinal histopathology in gluten sensitive enteropathy, i.e. lymphocytic enteritis (Marsh I lesion), lymphocytic enteritis with crypthyperplasia (Marsh II lesion), and villous atrophy, subdivided in partial villous atrophy (Marsh IIIA), subtotal villous atrophy (Marsh IIIB) and total villous atrophy (Marsh IIIC). Special attention is given to a subgroup of "refractory coeliacs", including the identification of (pre-) malignant aberrant T-cells in the intestinal mucosa of these patients. The new data on immunogenetics, epidemiology, histo-pathology and patient characteristics point to a significant change of views on coeliac disease.
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