Abstract

The mitotic activity of epithelial lymphocytes (expressed as percentage mitotic figures/3,000 lymphocytes/mucosal biopsy) was determined in a random sample of jejunal biopsies performed on 44 children with malabsorption, diarrhoea, or failure to thrive. The mitotic index (MI) exceeded 0.2% in 19 biopsies obtained from children with untreated celiac sprue (CS); there were no false positives. The remaining 25 biopsies (MI of <0.2%) were considered to be "nonceliac" in origin, among which were several with a severe degree of villous flattening. Conditions in this latter category excluded by a low MI included cow's milk protein enteropathy, selective immunoglobulin A deficiency, combined variable immunodeficiency, Crohn's jejunitis, and intractable diarrhoea of infancy. A high MI (>0.2%) prospectively distinguishes mucosal lesions due to untreated CS from other causes of malabsorption, particularly those associated with villous flattening, but in which the MI is <0.2%. This index is therefore proposed as a simple, reliable, and prospective histological marker of CS, and one that could: (a) reduce the need to perform multiple biopsies during a gluten‐free diet; and (b) avoid the necessity for follow‐up "diagnostic" gluten challenges, especially in very young children.

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