Coeliac disease in Ireland could be 50 percent higher than estimated

The Coeliac Society of Ireland has called on the Government to set up a central register for people with coeliac disease after it emerged that the number of people suffering from the condition could be 50 per cent higher than previously thought.

New international research suggests the number of people suffering from coeliac disease in Ireland is likely to be 75,000, rather than 50,000. That figure is based on recent studies carried out in Finland and Norway, which found that the previously accepted incidence rate for coeliac disease had been vastly underestimated.

An estimated 13,000 people in Ireland are diagnosed coeliac – although there is no central register and therefore no way to be certain. Those who are undiagnosed are at risk of long-term damage to their health.

“For decades, doctors thought that coeliac disease was found in one in every 100 people. However, new scientific research suggests the incidence rate is much higher than this. A new study from Norway tested more than 12,000 people in the general population to see how many had coeliac disease. They found the incidence rate was close to 1.5 per 100 – a 50 percent increase. This study backs up research from Finland, where they found that more than two in every 100 people have coeliac disease.

“We know that up to 75 percent of people with coeliac disease are undiagnosed worldwide. The Norwegian study found that rates of diagnosed coeliac disease in that country were only 0.4 people per 100 people. But when they checked the general population, they found that 1.5 people in every 100 had the disease.

“These studies suggest that even more people in Ireland than previously suspected have coeliac disease and are continuing to suffer with symptoms including abdominal pain, bloating, malnutrition, and diarrhoea. They also risk increased likelihood of long-term damage caused by untreated coeliac disease, including infertility, poor growth in children, osteoporosis, nerve damage, and bowel cancer,” Sarah Keogh, Coeliac Society consultant dietitian, said.

The Coeliac Society said it is now a matter of urgency that the Government and HSE implement an awareness campaign and introduce a central register to record the prevalence of the disease in Ireland. A central register would inform medical practitioners who is at greatest risk because there is a one in 10 chance of having the disease if a family member also has it.

For more information on the event and the Coeliac Society of Ireland, visit www.coeliac.ie or follow them on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook.

 

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