Limitations of xylose tolerance test as a screening procedure in childhood coeliac disease.
- 1 January 1975
- journal article
- research article
- Published by BMJ in Archives of Disease in Childhood
- Vol. 50 (1) , 34-39
- https://doi.org/10.1136/adc.50.1.34
Abstract
The usefulness of the xylose tolerance test as a screening procedure for coeliac disease has been reassessed in 54 children with suspected coeliac disease. 5- and 24-hour urinary excretion rates of xylose were of no value in discriminating between patients with and without coeliac disease; similarly, the 3-hour blood xylose concentration was nondiscriminatory. Three (15-8%) patients with subtotal villous atrophy and 8 (61-5%) with partial villous atrophy due to coeliac disease had one-hour blood xylose values which fell within the normal range. The effect of withdrawal or reintroduction of dietary gluten on sequential one-hour blood xylose levels was variable and generally unhelpful in predicting those patients who developed gluten-induced mucosal changes. The results of the present study emphasize the serious limitations of the xylose tolerance test as a screening procedure in childhood coeliac disease. It is recommended that the use of the urinary xylose test should be abandoned in the paediatric population. A normal one-hour blood xylose value does not exclude a diagnosis of coeliac disease even in young children who have never received a gluten-free diet. A clinical suspicion of coeliac disease remains the most important single factor in deciding whether to preform a jejunal biopsy.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Proceedings: Limitations of xylose tolerance test as screening procedure for coeliac disease.Archives of Disease in Childhood, 1974
- ONE-HOUR BLOOD-XYLOSE SCREENING-TEST FOR CŒLIAC DISEASE IN INFANTS AND YOUNG CHILDRENThe Lancet, 1973
- Is the Xylose Test still a Worth-while Investigation?BMJ, 1973
- Childhood celiac disease: Response of treated patients to a small uniform daily dose of wheat glutenThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1972
- 110 children with coeliac disease, 1950-1969Archives of Disease in Childhood, 1971
- Xylose Test: Effect of Aspirin and IndomethacinBMJ, 1971
- Follow up Study of Coeliac DiseaseBMJ, 1968
- The D-xylose Excretion Test in Coeliac Disease in ChildhoodArchives of Disease in Childhood, 1963
- Absorption of Folic Acid and D-Xylose as Tests of Small-intestinal FunctionBMJ, 1962
- Diagnostic Significance of d.Xylose Excretion TestGut, 1960