Background & Aims: Celiac disease is a polygenic disorder associated with HLA-DQ2 or HLA-DQ8, which are present in greater than 90% of patients. The disease is considered milder in the United States compared with Europe. We assessed whether differences in the frequency of HLA type may account for differences in severity of the disease by using cohorts of patients from New York and Paris.

Methods: HLA-DQ typing was performed on patients with celiac disease in New York and Paris. Clinical and pathologic data were compared between the New York and Parisian cohorts and also correlated with the different HLA types (HLA-DQ2, HLA-DQ2/-DQ8, HLA-DQ8).

Results: Among these patients, the disease was milder in the New York cohort compared with the Parisian cohort. There were fewer patients with a classical presentation (45% and 89%, respectively; P < 0.001) and less severe pathology (total villous atrophy, 64% and 89%, respectively; P < 0.05), and less marked intraepithelial lymphocytosis (intraepithelial leukocytes [IELs]/100 enterocytes, 48.1 and 82.5, respectively; P < 0.0001). HLA-DQ2 homozygotes were less prevalent in the New York cohort compared with the Parisian cohort (59% and 79%, respectively; P = 0.08). HLA-DQ8 alleles were more prevalent in the New York cohort compared with the Parisian cohort (41% and 21%, respectively; P = 0.026). There was, however, no difference in the clinical or pathologic parameters of severity when we compared the groups based on HLA type.

Conclusions: HLA-DQ8 alleles were increased in the New York cohort of patients with celiac disease; however, this did not account for less severe manifestations of the disease.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s1542-3565(04)00390-8DOI Listing

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