Breakthrough Coeliac Test Eases Diagnosis Pain

Walter and Eliza Hall Institute

Imagine having to eat something that makes you sick – just to see what's making you ill in the first place.

That's the harsh reality of current diagnostic tests for coeliac disease, which require people to eat large amounts of gluten for weeks in order to get an accurate diagnosis.

But this painful process could soon be a thing of the past, with WEHI researchers and industry partner Novoviah Pharmaceuticals developing a world-first blood test that can identify the condition in patients – even when they're on gluten-free diets.

At a glance

  • New clinical research published in the high-impact journal Gastroenterology shows a game-changer blood test for gluten-specific T cells can detect coeliac disease, even when no gluten has been eaten.

  • Reliable diagnosis for coeliac disease is currently possible only when gluten is consumed regularly. A gastroscopy and biopsy are also usually required to identify intestinal injury.

  • The new test could boost rates of diagnosis, identify patients at risk of severe reactions to gluten and detect silent coeliac disease in people who are asymptomatic.

Coeliac disease is one of the most common autoimmune illnesses in Australia, caused by an immune reaction to the gluten protein found in wheat, rye and barley. More than 350,000 Australians currently live with the condition.

While early diagnosis is critical to minimising long-term complications of the disease, up to 80% of cases around the world remain undiagnosed.

The diagnostic process can be confusing for patients and non-specialist doctors, as the reduction in symptoms from a gluten free diet is not always a marker of coeliac disease.

Current coeliac testing methods - serology blood tests or gastroscopy with intestinal biopsy - do not work reliably for those on a gluten free diet, and require regular gluten consumption to be effective. As a result, many people are deterred from seeking a definite diagnosis because they do not want to consume gluten and be sick.

Associate Professor Jason Tye-Din, Head of WEHI's Coeliac Research Laboratory and a gastroenterologist at the Royal Melbourne Hospital, said every approved method to diagnose coeliac

disease currently requires people to eat gluten.

"There are likely millions of people around the world living with undiagnosed coeliac disease simply because the path to diagnosis is difficult, and at times, debilitating," Assoc Prof Tye-Din said.

"This new test promises to simplify and speed up accurate diagnosis, while also avoiding the suffering that comes with eating gluten for extended periods to reactivate coeliac disease.

"By eliminating the need for a gluten challenge, we're addressing one of the biggest deterrents in current diagnostic practices.

"This test could be a game-changer, sparing thousands of people the emotional and physical toll of returning to gluten. It's a major step towards faster, safer diagnosis."

Critical signalling

In 2019, WEHI researchers, working with Dr Robert Anderson (now with Brisbane-based Novoviah Pharmaceuticals), made the unexpected discovery that the immune marker interleukin 2 (IL-2) spiked in the bloodstream of people with coeliac disease shortly after they ate gluten.

But could this critical signal still appear, even if no gluten had been consumed?

Building on a promising pilot study in 2021 and using a new clinical diagnostic system developed with Novoviah Pharmaceuticals, the research team set out to test the performance and understand the

science of an "in-tube" gluten challenge blood test.

In their new study, published in Gastroenterology, the researchers used blood samples from 181 volunteers recruited via the Royal Melbourne Hospital.

This included 75 people with treated coeliac disease (on a gluten free diet), 13 with active, untreated coeliac disease, 32 people with non-coeliac gluten sensitivity and 61 healthy controls.

Participant blood samples were then mixed with gluten in a test tube for a day to see if the IL-2 signal appeared.

PhD researcher Olivia Moscatelli, who was diagnosed with coeliac disease at 18, said the team was thrilled to find the test could detect the condition with up to 90% sensitivity and 97% specificity – even in patients following a strict gluten free diet.

"This breakthrough is deeply personal as it could spare others from the gruelling diagnostic process I had to endure. Knowing I've played a role in this achievement is a powerful, full-circle moment," Moscatelli said.

As seen in the previous study, the IL-2 signal only increased in the volunteers with coeliac disease, demonstrating the immune response to gluten can be detected in a tube, without a gluten challenge.

"This represents a promising new tool to support diagnosis, especially for people who can't be diagnosed with the currently available methods.

"We also found the strength of the IL-2 signal correlated with the severity of a patient's symptoms, allowing us to predict how severely a person with coeliac disease might react to gluten, without them

actually having to eat it," Moscatelli said.

"The test's performance in individuals with other autoimmune conditions in addition to coeliac disease, such as type 1 diabetes or Hashimoto's thyroiditis, is also unmatched."

"Some diagnostic tests give false positives in the presence of other autoimmune diseases, but this was not an issue for this test."

"This is largely because the technology we use is highly sensitive and can detect the IL-2 signal at exceptionally low levels. It's like the equivalent of being able to detect a single grain of sand in a

swimming pool."

While the ultrasensitive cytokine testing technology used for this study isn't currently utilised in pathology labs, researchers hope this will change in the future, which would allow this blood test to be widely used by healthcare professionals.

Dr Robert Anderson, co-founder of Novoviah Pharmaceuticals, current President of the International Society for the Study of Coeliac Disease and a gastroenterologist at Mackay Base Hospital, said the

landmark study reflected the WEHI team's global role as leaders in translational immunology.

Dr Anderson said: "I have been delighted to have a close and exceptionally productive collaboration with Professor Tye-Din that launched innovative therapies and now diagnostics harnessing the gluten-specific T cells we obsessively characterised in studies over the past 25 years."

The WEHI team is now collaborating with Novoviah Pharmaceuticals to confirm the test's accuracy across diverse populations and accrue critically needed real-world data.

The research is supported by Coeliac Australia, Novoviah Pharmaceuticals (who provided the proprietary test for this study), Beck Family Foundation, Butterfield Family, the Veith Foundation and the crucial contributions of the study participants.

The study, "Blood-based T Cell Diagnosis of Celiac Disease", is published in Gastroenterology (DOI: 10.1053/j.gastro.2025.05.022).

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