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  • Jefferson Adams
    Jefferson Adams

    Hookworm Infection No Magic Bullet for Gluten Tolerance in Celiac Disease

    Reviewed and edited by a celiac disease expert.

    Can hookworms help celiacs eat gluten? The answer is yes and no, coupled with some potential quality of life trade-offs. Here's the rundown.

    Hookworm Infection No Magic Bullet for Gluten Tolerance in Celiac Disease - Silver Bullet. Image: CC BY-SA 2.0--eschipul
    Caption: Silver Bullet. Image: CC BY-SA 2.0--eschipul

    Celiac.com 01/13/2023 - Celiac disease is an autoimmune disorder in which gluten consumption triggers gut damage. The only effective treatment is a strict gluten-free diet. Can hookworms help celiacs eat gluten? The answer is yes and no, coupled with some trade-offs. Here's the rundown.

    Earlier studies have indicated that hookworm infection may restore some level of gluten tolerance in celiac patients, however, none of these approximately one dozen studies were placebo controlled. We've done a number of articles on hookworms and celiac disease. We've even done an article on health claims from at least one hookworm-infected celiac patient who claimed he was able to safely eat gluten.

    Can Hookworms Help Celiacs Eat Gluten?

    Celiac.com Sponsor (A12):
    To get a more detailed answer, a research team recently undertook a randomized, placebo-controlled trial of hookworm infection in nearly sixty people with celiac disease. The team included John Croese, MD; Gregory C. Miller, FRCPA; Louise Marquart, PhD; Stacey Llewellyn, BSc; Rohit Gupta, FRACP; Luke Becker, BAppSci; Andrew D. Clouston, PhD; Christine Welch, FRACP; Julia Sidorenko, PhD; Leanne Wallace, BSc; Peter M. Visscher, PhD; Matthew L. Remedios, FRACP; James S. McCarthy, MD; Peter O'Rourke, PhD; Graham Radford-Smith, PhD; Alex Loukas, PhD; Mark Norrie, PhD; John W. Masson, FRACP; Richard B. Gearry, PhD; Tony Rahman, PhD; and Paul R. Giacomin, PhD.

    They are variously associated with the Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology at The Prince Charles Hospital in Brisbane, Australia; the Center for Molecular Therapeutics, Australian Institute of Tropical Health and Medicine, James Cook University, Cairns, Australia; the Envoi Specialist Pathologists, Brisbane, Australia; the QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute, Brisbane, Australia; the Department of Gastroenterology, Townsville University Hospital, Townsville, Australia; the Institute for Molecular Bioscience at the University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia; the Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital, Brisbane, Australia; the Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Logan Hospital, Brisbane, Australia; and the Department of Medicine, University of Otago, Christchurch and Canterbury District Health Board, Christchurch, New Zealand.

    Study Ran Nearly Two Years

    In a study that ran for just under two years, a research team of medical professionals treated celiac patients with with a placebo, or with either third stage larvae of the 20 or 40 Necator americanus hookworm (L3-20 group or L3-40 group). 

    Patients then increased their gluten consumption to 5 grams per day for 12 weeks, 1 gram intermittent twice weekly for 12 weeks, and two grams sustained for six weeks, followed by liberal diet for 1 year.

    About forty to fifty percent of hookworm patients, and about fifty-five percent of placebo subjects made it to the main outcome point of 42 weeks, and hookworm-treated participants did show a sharp reduction in gluten-related events. 

    Duodenal villous height: crypt depth deteriorated similarly compared with their enrollment values in each group, with an average change of −0.6 for the placebo group; -0.5 for the L3-20 group , −1.1 for the L3-40 group. 

    A retrospective analysis showed that nearly one in four L3-treated participants failed to develop successful hookworm infection. 

    Lower Quality of Life Scores for Hookworm Patients

    Between forty to fifty percent of participants in each group completed the study, but quality of life symptom scores after the gluten challenge were under forty percent in hookworm-positive participants, compared with over forty-five percent for the hookworm negative group.

    From their findings, the team concludes that hookworm infection DOES NOT restore gluten tolerance enough to allow sustained moderate consumption of gluten of two grams per day or more.

    However, hookworm infection did lead to better symptom scores after occasional consumption of lower doses of gluten.

    The findings undercut the idea that hookworm infection is some kind of magic bullet for gluten consumption for people with celiac disease. 

    Hookworm Infection Not a Magic Bullet for Celiacs

    At best, the data support the idea that hookworm infection can help reduce symptoms of moderate gluten consumption in people with celiac disease, but that any reduction also likely comes with a lower overall quality of life score.

    This is the most definitive study we've yet seen on the effects of hookworm infection on the ability of celiac disease patients to tolerate gluten. The results are clear that any modest benefits of hookworm infection comes with some potential reduction in quality of life. Still, the ability of hookworms to help reduce symptoms of moderate gluten consumption in people with celiac disease merits further study.

    It's possible that hookworms hold some secrets in their biochemistry that might help to offer some extra protection against the inflammation triggered by limited gluten consumption. That is some exciting news.

    Read more at: Clin Transl Gastroenterol. 2020 Dec; 11(12): e00274.


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    dixonpete

    I'm the hookworm host that was featured in the previous article. At this point I'm tempted to shoot a video of me eating spaghetti followed by an apple pie dessert.

    In our Helminthic Therapy Support Group I think few people hosting hookworms would say that their hookworms last 42 weeks. The one time I let mine die out it was at 30-week mark. I know that because I saw the white worm corpses in my stool, and I then got sick and had to go back to being gluten-free and meat-free shortly thereafter, so I would have flunked out of that study. Many of us re-inoculate at the 12-week mark. I find 26 weeks, twice a year, works for me. It varies for everybody because it depends on how quickly the immune system kills the hookworms off. Those with GI immune issues like IBD (celiac, ulcerative colitis and Crohn's) tend to kill their hookworms off faster. Also, nobody uses the protocol that was used in the study. People usually start with 5 larvae and work up slowly depending on the results that they see. Some need relatively few hookworms to get relief. Others might need 10x as many.

    In the study nearly 1 in 4 people didn't maintain a hookworm colony. Was one ever established for these subjects? Or did the hookworms die off mid-study? Perhaps an insufficient number of hookworms were alive to make much difference to their gluten sensitivity.

    So far as I've learned people who host hookworms fall into 3 camps in regard to their tolerance for gluten. For one group, hookworms don't help at all, at least not for gluten. A second group has a changed (diminished) response to gluten exposure. Basically these people need to stay on a gluten-free diet but they won't have to take off work anymore from casual gluten exposures. And then there's my group, people who could bathe in gluten for all the difference it would make. We become normal and can eat as we like. For that group, hookworms are life-changing. I wish I had the numbers for the relative sizes of the groups but unfortunately I don't.

    I maintain that hookworms are worth trying. In low numbers they are benign, and since people with celiac disease often have other immune related conditions like I did, there's the opportunity for the hookworms to help there as well.

    There's also the matter if I had taken those iffy study results seriously I wouldn't be where I am today. And no, I don't usually work on my PC surrounded by baked goods. But I could if I wanted to.

    IMG_20230115_222426.webp.45f10050a5959fa9d13c7ca9f2a733fc.webp

     

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    John Scott

    The conclusion by the authors of the study featured above - Croese et al, 2020 (1) - that infection with NA does not obviate the need for a gluten-free diet is rendered unreliable by methodological deficiencies in the trial design.

    The trial participants each received two doses of either 10x or 20x N. americanus (NA) hookworm larvae at weeks 0 and 8, and were challenged with gluten between weeks 12 and 42, with an optional 52 week extension for those participants without celiac disease symptoms. However…

    * The trial period was of insufficient length. While some of the benefits derived from hosting NA may begin to appear within a few weeks, they do not become consistent until at least 12 weeks, and, in some cases, can take up to 2 years to fully develop. (2)

    * Some participants may have received an inadequate number of NA. The level of helminth dosing required to achieve disease remission in different hosts can vary by a factor of 10. (3)

    * Dosing with NA may not have been continued for long enough to maintain efficacy. While NA have been reported to survive in hosts for many years, data gathered from the community of thousands of helminth self-treaters show that, in practice, NA may survive for as little as 2-3 months in some individuals, especially those with digestive diseases. (2)

    * The worms hosted by some trial participants may have lost efficacy before the end of the trial, due to the possible ingestion of certain dietary substances that can adversely affect, or even kill, NA in some individuals. (4)

    A more recent study, by Venkatakrishnan et al (3), has highlighted the fact that some “gold standard” helminthic therapy trials, have, in spite of their double-blind, placebo-controlled design, provided lacklustre or even false negative results due to a lack of adequate consideration of the biology of living helminths and their interactions with their hosts - exactly the points I have made immediately above.

    For more about these issues, see: Problems with clinical trials using live helminths: Trialing the human hookworm (NA). (5)

    (1) Randomized, Placebo Controlled Trial of Experimental Hookworm Infection for Improving Gluten Tolerance in Celiac Disease

    (2) Hookworm dosing and response

    (3) Socio-medical studies of individuals self-treating with helminths provide insight into clinical trial design for assessing helminth therapy

    (4) Human helminth care manual

    (5) Helminthic therapy research: Problems with clinical trials using live helminths

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    Scott Adams

    Based on this peer reviewed study, Celiac.com does not, at this point, recommend that anyone with celiac disease forgo the only safe and effective treatment for celiac disease, which is a gluten-free diet.

    @dixonpete and @John Scott, please produce a list of recognized celiac disease experts who support hookworm infection for celiac disease instead of the gluten-free diet.

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    John Scott
    On 1/16/2023 at 11:25 AM, Scott Adams said:

    Based on this peer reviewed study, Celiac.com does not, at this point, recommend that anyone with celiac disease forgo the only safe and effective treatment for celiac disease, which is a gluten-free diet.

    @dixonpete and @John Scott, please produce a list of recognized celiac disease experts who support hookworm infection for celiac disease instead of the gluten-free diet.

    I am not recommending that the hosting of helminths should replace a gluten-free diet. My post, above, was only intended to draw attention to the fact that the conclusions of Croese et al cannot be relied upon, leaving the question as to how effective hookworms might be in addressing celiac disease still open.

    It is, of course, eminently sensible for you to recommend that anyone with celiac disease does not forgo a gluten-free diet, but this advice does not preclude celiacs from also hosting helminths, which current scientific understanding of the immune system’s development and function indicates is likely to be beneficial.

     

    https://helminthictherapywiki.org/wiki/images/2/2b/A_prescription_for_clinical_immunology-_the_pills_are_available_and_ready_for_testing._A_review.pdf  (PDF) 

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1618732/ 

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2632706/ 

    Socio-medical studies indicate that self-treatment with helminths is effective for many people, probably even most people, in terms of alleviating inflammatory-related diseases.

    http://www.yourwildlife.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/galley-proof-v2.pdf  (PDF) 

    https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27240605/ 

    https://helminthictherapywiki.org/wiki/images/a/ad/Socio-medical_studies_of_individuals_self-treating_with_helminths_provide_insight_into_clinical_trial_design_for_assessing_helminth_therapy.pdf  (PDF) 

    It is therefore likely that someone with celiac disease will enjoy generally improved health while hosting benign, mutualistic helminths. It is up to them, if, once their health has improved, they then want to test their tolerance of gluten, in the way that @dixonpete has done.

    Obviously, if they do this, they should get the appropriate tests to ensure that any consumption of gluten in the wake of an overt increase in tolerance does not cause a hidden resumption of the disease process that had previously been halted by a gluten-free diet.

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    dixonpete
    10 hours ago, Scott Adams said:

    @dixonpete and @John Scott, please produce a list of recognized celiac disease experts who support hookworm infection for celiac disease instead of the gluten-free diet.

    Nobody is making the claim that hosting hookworms will resolve every celiac's disease. Unfortunately it just doesn't work that way. What does seem to happen is that for the majority of subjects in most all the studies is that reactions to gluten are lessened. John Scott makes a good case that using best practices gained from real world experience hosting would yield better results than seen in the studies.

    Hookworms for many would mean less risk of the extreme gluten reactions to casual exposure. Scanning the forums for food sensitivity/food sensitivities I can see it's a constant refrain on this site. That's one of the things hosting hookworms is known best for resolving.

    I go back to my example. My celiac disease got fixed. As did my colitis, all because of hosting. If I stop hosting I regress back to the way I was. That's called proof of concept and proof of mechanism. Probably there is some genetic explanation why hosting works better for some than others. Till that's known it's a lottery. You buy your ticket, and you might win, and you might lose. But unless you play there's no possibility of success.

    You asked about experts. John Scott heads up the world's biggest support group for helping people do helminths like hookworms. There is no one with more practical experience on the topic than him. I did write to Dr Mark Davis, the person who did that video I showed you claiming he's had success treating celiacs with hookworms. Hopefully he'll chime in.

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    Scott Adams

    I see nothing wrong with the study, and I do not buy the criticisms of the study that you've linked to (some self promotional links have been removed). Again, the multiple PhD's involved in the study spent years creating, conducting, and then publishing their very well-designed double blind study--with zero financial interests involved. 

    I cannot conclude that those pushing for hookworm treatment here do not have a financial interest in that, but I can say they neither are qualified to make the claim that this study's conclusions are incorrect. On one hand both of you are saying that the study is flawed, and on the other hand you are both agreeing with its conclusion--that celiacs should not eat gluten. Well, which is it?

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    dixonpete
    38 minutes ago, Scott Adams said:

    I see nothing wrong with the study, and I do not buy the criticisms of the study that you've linked to (some self promotional links have been removed). Again, the multiple PhD's involved in the study spent years creating, conducting, and then publishing their very well-designed double blind study--with zero financial interests involved. 

    I cannot conclude that those pushing for hookworm treatment here do not have a financial interest in that, but I can say they neither are qualified to make the claim that this study's conclusions are incorrect. On one hand both of you are saying that the study is flawed, and on the other hand you are both agreeing with its conclusion--that celiacs should not eat gluten. Well, which is it?

    I can't speak for John, but the only money I've seen has gone out to purchase hookworm larvae. My motivation is humanitarian. I think back at how sick I was, and I look around and see others who are currently in the same boat that I was, and I want to give them a good shake and get them out of that hole. Do you have any idea how much good karma you get from acts like that if they do get better? Obviously you do, because in a similar way you run a site dedicated to helping people. To my eyes, promoting the adoption of hookworm hosting is the same thing.

    Back in 2018 after my first inoculation with hookworms I got back on gluten as soon as I could and stuffed myself with it. I didn't have antibody tests and I didn't get a biopsy done. Those were mistakes committed from ignorance. But it turned out I was lucky and got away with it.

    As I said before, if celiacs host hookworms, one of three things will happen. The first is nothing. Failure, at least in regard to gluten. No improvement. The second possible outcome is a lessened reaction. No more norovirus-like events. Perhaps instead it's just an upset stomach to a gluten exposure. The third possibility is what I got. Cake. Whenever I want it. The good stuff. And not just that, I got back all the other foods I couldn't eat. Previously I was down to 12 foods and still felt poorly and was going to the bathroom 6x a day. Now I feel fine and go 1-2x a day. It's a night and day improvement in quality of life and I have the ability to go to any restaurant I like and eat anything off their menu.

    But as I have said, you won't know how things will go until you try.

    John's entire focus is helping people successfully get started with hosting helminths. It's not an exaggeration to say he knows more than those PhDs as he's the center of a whole community of thousands of people actively using them and trying to find the best way to navigate their various health conditions. He might be too modest to say that but I'll say it for him.

    As for me, I feel justified saying hosting hookworms can help celiacs because they helped me. I was an uber-reactive celiac at risk of losing my colon to colitis and now I'm healthy and have a fridge and freezer full of bread. So damn right I disagree with those studies.

     

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    John Scott
    On 1/17/2023 at 11:52 AM, Scott Adams said:

    I see nothing wrong with the study, and I do not buy the criticisms of the study that you've linked to (some self promotional links have been removed). Again, the multiple PhD's involved in the study spent years creating, conducting, and then publishing their very well-designed double blind study--with zero financial interests involved. 

    I cannot conclude that those pushing for hookworm treatment here do not have a financial interest in that, but I can say they neither are qualified to make the claim that this study's conclusions are incorrect. On one hand both of you are saying that the study is flawed, and on the other hand you are both agreeing with its conclusion--that celiacs should not eat gluten. Well, which is it?

    Last year, Venkatakrishnan et al, published a study with the following conclusion.

    "Unfortunately, for a variety of economic, regulatory, and practical issues surrounding the conduct of clinical trials, main stream trials have thus far been unable to accommodate the nuances of helminth therapy. Foremost among the issues that clinical trials must address before they can effectively test the potential for helminth therapy are (a) details in formulation of the helminth product that affect efficacy, and (b) the very wide range of doses typically needed within a cohort of individuals."

    This paper’s supervising author is a professor of medicine, an immunologist who ran one of the world’s largest transplant laboratories. So I’m in very good company when I draw attention to the methodological deficiencies of studies like the one reported by Croese et al in 2020.

    To reiterate my position, since the Croese et al study design was flawed, the question as to how effective hookworms might be in addressing celiac disease is still not fully answered. Until such time as a better designed study is mounted, it is unquestionably advisable for anyone with celiac disease to continue to eat a gluten-free diet, but this advice does not preclude celiacs from also hosting helminths, which current scientific understanding of the immune system’s development and function indicates is likely to be beneficial to their health. I would expect that in many cases where celiacs become helminth hosts, they will likely find that they are at least spared severe reactions to accidental gluten exposures. Some may experience additional benefits.

    As for my personal interests, they are most definitely not financial. I first began my involvement in the global helminthic therapy movement a decade ago, after I retired, and have worked tirelessly since then, without remuneration of any kind, to gather and curate data about the therapy with the sole intention of making this knowledge as widely available as possible, for free, to enable more people to benefit from what is a truly remarkable therapy with a solid evidence base. 

    "Twenty years from now everybody is going to have a helminth, and no insurance company will begin to cover you if you don’t have your helminths. We’re very confident in the science, that every single human being needs a helminth. It’s part of our biology." (Prof William Parker, Duke University, 2016.)

    "In developed countries, where we are well nourished, worms are potentially good. If I had Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis or multiple sclerosis, I would infect myself without hesitation." (Prof Alex Loukas, Australian Institute of Tropical Health & Medicine.)

    Also, check out this graphic, prepared by Robert Summers, Professor Emeritus, Department of Internal Medicine at the University of Iowa, to illustrate the relationship between an absence of helminths and higher rates of autoimmune disorders - a category that includes celiac disease.
    Distribution of Autoimmune Disorders and Helminths.

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    Scott Adams

    So it seems that your position, even though you disagree with this study's methods, is the same as the authors of this study--I just want to be clear here.

    It seems that you agree that people with celiac disease and do hookworm therapy should not eat gluten, and that hookworm therapy may only be helpful for low amounts of gluten, for example cross-contamination that celiacs might encounter when eating out, going to other people's houses, etc.--this is exactly what this study concludes.

    I will point out that AN-PEP enzymes are a far better choice for this purpose, as AN-PEP been shown in numerous studies to break down small amounts of gluten in the stomach, before it reaches the intestines, thus avoiding the cascading autoimmune reaction. One brand, who is a sponsor here (but not why I'm sharing this), is GliadinX, and for anyone interested in reading through the many studies the links are on their site: https://www.gliadinx.com/publications 

    Given a choice between hookworm therapy or AN-PEP enzymes, it is clear to me that the enzymes should be the first choice.

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    dixonpete
    1 hour ago, Scott Adams said:

    Given a choice between hookworm therapy or AN-PEP enzymes, it is clear to me that the enzymes should be the first choice.

    I completely disagree. Again, I'm drawing from personal experience here, but my GI tract under hookworms has changed from a nightmare to deal with to being a veritable ticking clock. It seems no matter I throw at it, it just keeps chugging along. Completely aside from gluten I regularly find foods like I did yesterday, ham and pea soup, that I had long given up on as being too troublesome, that are now totally fine.

    Enzymes don't compensate for a broad based immune system dysfunction.

    Also, it's not clear to me what you think the downsides are of HT. Aside from the initial rash, I've never had any awareness of the hookworms' presence. I can eat anything, and I'm not daily popping enzyme capsules in the hope of being crushed by a quarter of a crouton, or however much gluten enzymes can reasonably expect to be able to handle.

    Re-reading this before posting, I acknowledge the benefits I get from hookworms appear to be on the high side of what can be expected. That said, wouldn't it be just sensible to find out how you would be on them?

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    John Scott
    2 hours ago, Scott Adams said:

    So it seems that your position, even though you disagree with this study's methods, is the same as the authors of this study--I just want to be clear here.

    It seems that you agree that people with celiac disease and do hookworm therapy should not eat gluten, and that hookworm therapy may only be helpful for low amounts of gluten, for example cross-contamination that celiacs might encounter when eating out, going to other people's houses, etc.--this is exactly what this study concludes.

    I will point out that AN-PEP enzymes are a far better choice for this purpose, as AN-PEP been shown in numerous studies to break down small amounts of gluten in the stomach, before it reaches the intestines, thus avoiding the cascading autoimmune reaction. One brand, who is a sponsor here (but not why I'm sharing this), is GliadinX, and for anyone interested in reading through the many studies the links are on their site: https://www.gliadinx.com/publications 

    Given a choice between hookworm therapy or AN-PEP enzymes, it is clear to me that the enzymes should be the first choice.

    OK, to be clear, my position is not quite the same as that of Croese et al.

    Rather than stating, as they have done, that "Hookworm infection does not restore tolerance to sustained moderate consumption of gluten…" , more careful researchers would have said that, "In our study, hookworm infection did not restore tolerance to sustained moderate consumption of gluten…" which is a rather different conclusion.

    Due to its apparent methodological flaws, this research can’t be taken as the last word on the potential benefit for celiacs of hosting hookworms, and it’s to this fact that I wish to draw attention. I don’t want people to write off helminthic therapy based on this trial, especially as there are numerous celiacs in the helminthic therapy self-treatment community who have reported significant benefits.
    Helminthic therapy personal stories: celiac disease

    Granted, these are anecdotal accounts, but when there are a number of people reporting similar effects, there is reason to look more closely at what they are doing. And one team of researchers said last year that, "At the present time, we would argue that the primary “lab” for helminth therapy seems to be within the community of self-treaters. This “biohacking” phenomena of science outside of the established main stream is not unique to helminth therapy. However, given that helminth therapy addresses a fundamental cause of disease in Western society, this particular biohacking endeavor may in fact be critical for public health."
    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1383576921002063?via%3Dihub 

    As you say, Aspergillus niger‐derived prolyl endoprotease (AN‐PEP) appears to be a very promising agent for degrading gluten in the stomach. However, the authors of the most recent randomised clinical trial that I was able to access on PubMed (König et al 2017) concluded that, while the AN-PEP enzyme appears to be effective as a digestive aid to protect against the unintentional intake of gluten, it is not intended to replace a gluten-free diet in gluten-related disorders.
    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5638938/ 

    Unlike an enzyme product, helminths, such as hookworms, deliver powerful immune modulation with far-reaching health benefits generally, in addition to the possibility of protection against at least accidental gluten exposure. And you don't need to remember to take helminths with you when you eat out because they are always with you, as long as you re-dose every few months.

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    Scott Adams

    Since a majority of those with celiac disease recover fully on a gluten-free diet alone, clearly hookworm infection would not be necessary no matter what. For those who are recovered, like myself, and who still want to eat in restaurants or outside their homes, AN-PEP enzymes have worked quite well, and it is no trouble at all to take a couple of capsules with a meal. 

    The very criticisms you have of this study--that apparently a large number of PhD's can't figure out how to use hookworms effectively, is in fact STRONG evidence that the vast majority of celiacs SHOULT NOT be trying to use them for this purpose.

    The only people with celiac disease who might want to try hookworm infection for treatment would be those with refractory spue, which can be deadly, and is a runaway autoimmune process that may not be associated with gluten contamination (but often is and can be reversed by dietary changes if this is the case).

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  • About Me

    Jefferson Adams

    Jefferson Adams is Celiac.com's senior writer and Digital Content Director. He earned his B.A. and M.F.A. at Arizona State University. His articles, essays, poems, stories and book reviews have appeared in numerous magazines, journals, and websites, including North American Project, Antioch Review, Caliban, Mississippi Review, Slate, and more. He is the author of more than 2,500 articles on celiac disease. His university coursework includes studies in science, scientific methodology, biology, anatomy, physiology, medicine, logic, and advanced research. He previously devised health and medical content for Colgate, Dove, Pfizer, Sharecare, Walgreens, and more. Jefferson has spoken about celiac disease to the media, including an appearance on the KQED radio show Forum, and is the editor of numerous books, including "Cereal Killers" by Scott Adams and Ron Hoggan, Ed.D.

    >VIEW ALL ARTICLES BY JEFFERSON ADAMS

     


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    It might be gross but the results were pretty darn interesting. Now don't try this at home, needless to say, but let's look at what these professional researchers discovered.
    The hookworm, also known as a parasitic helminth, is known to have beneficial effects in inflammatory disorders. Therefore the researchers decided to see what would occur if they induced a hookworm infection into known celiacs and fed them escalating amounts of gluten.
    A one year study was e...


    Jefferson Adams
    Man Claims Hookworm Treatment Led to Remission of Celiac Disease
    Celiac.com 12/16/2022 - Recently, an interesting discussion thread popped onto our celiac disease and gluten-free forum. A member of the forum, going by the handle @dixonpete, claims his celiac disease went into remission after treatment with hookworms.
    Moreover, he claims that he is essentially cured, and able to eat gluten with no side effects, and has had at least one recent negative follow up tTG antibody test to back this up.
    History of Hookworm Infection to Treat Celiac Disease
    We've done more than a few articles on the potential to use hookworms to treat celiac disease. We've done a number of articles on hookworms as the potential future of celiac disease treatment, including: 
    Are Intestinal Worms the Future of Autoimmune Disease Treatment? Could ...


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