Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Enrolling By Invitation

Enrolling By InvitationNCT05084937

Celiac Disease in Childhood-Adulthood Transition

Celiac Disease in Childhood-Adulthood Transition (CeliCAT)

Status
Enrolling By Invitation
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
400 (estimated)
Sponsor
Tampere University Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
13 Years – 19 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Aims of this study are to evaluate adolescents with celiac disease during their transition from pediatrics to adult care, and to develop better healthcare follow-up practices.

Detailed description

Celiac disease is one of the most common chronic gastrointestinal diseases affecting 1-3% of population worldwide. It is treated with life-long and strict gluten-free diet. When dietary treatment is successful, prognosis of pediatric patients seems to be excellent whereas ongoing predisposition to gluten may increase the risk even to permanent complications. However, gluten-free diet may cause burden and restrictions in everyday life impairing quality of life. Regular follow-up is recommended to support the treatment and to detect early possible comorbidities and complications, but, in practice, patients are often lost to follow-up. Studies about the significance of follow-up and its optimal implementation are scarce. Pediatric patients form a special group here as they may not even remember the reason for the diagnosis if it was set in early childhood, and the education about the disease and its treatment are often given primarily to the caregivers. Responsibility of the treatment shifts to patients themselves in adolescence at the same time with other significant changes in life and they have more often challenges with gluten-free diet than other patients. Despite this, studies about the transition from pediatrics to adult-care are very few. This study evaluates 13-19 years old patients diagnosed with celiac disease in childhood (\<16 years of age) and compares them to adolescents without celiac disease in selected variables. Study focuses on healthcare follow-up practices and pilot a CeliCAT transition form in a randomized, controlled study design. The main hypothesis is that structured follow-up and transition of pediatric patients to adult care predicts better health, quality of life and adherence to the dietary treatment later in life. Data is collected with physical examination, questionnaires and with blood and urine samples. Follow-up is arranged at one and three years from the first visit.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERCeliCAT formSystematic summary to support transition

Timeline

Start date
2021-11-01
Primary completion
2026-12-01
Completion
2026-12-01
First posted
2021-10-20
Last updated
2024-11-25

Locations

5 sites across 1 country: Finland

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05084937. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.