4.4 Article

Detection of gluten in duplicate portions to determine gluten intake of coeliac disease patients on a gluten-free diet

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF NUTRITION
Volume 125, Issue 9, Pages 1051-1057

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0007114520002974

Keywords

Coeliac disease; Gluten-free diet; Gluten; Dietary intake; ELISA

Funding

  1. Ministry of LNV [WOT-02-002]

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This study investigated the gluten content of foods consumed by CD patients following a gluten-free diet and estimated their total daily gluten intake. Results showed that some foods contained higher levels of gluten than allowed, suggesting a need for re-evaluation of legal thresholds.
This study determined the gluten content of foods and meals consumed by coeliac disease (CD) patients who adhere to a gluten-free diet, and to estimate the total daily intake of gluten of these patients. CD patients fulfilling defined inclusion criteria were preselected and approached for participation in the study. Duplicate portions (DP) of foods and mixed dishes were collected from the CD patients for evaluating complete daily food intake during two individual days. Also, for these days, written food records were completed by the participants. From each DP, a laboratory sample was prepared and analysed for its gluten concentration and total daily gluten intake was calculated. Each individual's total daily intakes of energy and macronutrients were calculated using the Dutch food composition database. In total, twenty-seven CD patients participated, seven males and twenty females, aged between 21 and 64 years. In thirty-two (6 %) of 499 food samples collected in total, more than 3 mg/kg gluten was present. In four of these thirty-two samples, the gluten concentration was above the European legal limit of 20 mg/kg and three of the four samples had a gluten-free label. The maximal gluten intake was 3 center dot 3 mg gluten/d. The gluten tolerance for sensitive CD patients (>0 center dot 75 mg/d) was exceeded on at least six out of fifty-four study days. To also protect these sensitive CD patients, legal thresholds should be re-evaluated and the detection limit of analytical methods for gluten analysis lowered.

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