When should you test children for CDA? | Celiac Disease
For young children with a family history of celiac disease, anxiety, aggression, sleep problems and other behavioral issues might signal that it’s time to test for celiac, researchers say.
In the study of 3- and 4-year olds at high risk for celiac, mothers of 3-year-olds that had undiagnosed celiac reported more negative psychological symptoms in their children compared to mothers of toddlers with diagnosed celiac or of kids that didn’t have the disease.
“This is the first prospective study to be able to answer the question whether children with celiac disease autoimmunity have psychological manifestation symptoms,” senior study author Dr. Daniel Agardh of Malmo University in Sweden told Reuters Health by email.
Previous studies have looked at whether parents knowing that their child tested positive for celiac disease autoimmunity (CDA) had an impact on their reporting physical symptoms of celiac disease in their child.
- The current study is the first to examine how psychological symptoms were reported by mothers before they knew their children had CDA, the authors note in their report online February 20 in Pediatrics.
Agardh and his colleagues analyzed data from an international study designed to examine environmental triggers of type 1 diabetes and celiac disease in children who were at higher than average risk of those conditions because of family history. The current study included more than 4,000 children in the U.S., Finland, Germany and Sweden.
The children were enrolled as infants and visited clinics every three months until age 4 years, and then twice annually until the they were 15 years old. After age 2 years, the children were also screened for tissue transglutaminase autoantibodies (tTGA) annually.
In addition to the clinical evaluations, researchers asked whether children were on gluten-free diets, and parents answered psychosocial questionnaires when the kids were between 3 and 4 years old and again when the kids were between 4 and 5 years old.
Overall, there were 66 children who had tested positive for CDA by the time they were about 3.5 years old but their mothers were not yet aware of their child’s diagnosis. There were also 40 children who fit this description by age 4.5 years. Another 440 children had tested positive by age 3 years and their parents were aware of it.
- Researchers found that mothers who were unaware their children were CDA positive reported more child anxiety and depression, aggressive behavior and sleep problems compared with the mothers of children without CDA.