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    Study Estimates the Costs of Delayed Celiac Disease Diagnosis (+Video)

    Reviewed and edited by a celiac disease expert.

    A long delay is not only frustrating; it often leads to more appointments, more tests, missed work, and a higher chance of problems like anemia, bone loss, and hospital stays.

    Study Estimates the Costs of Delayed Celiac Disease Diagnosis (+Video) - delayed by koen_jacobs is licensed under CC BY-ND 2.0.++ Watch the Video ++
    Caption:
    delayed by koen_jacobs is licensed under CC BY-ND 2.0.
    ++ Watch the Video ++

    Celiac.com 11/10/2025 - Celiac disease is an immune condition in which eating gluten damages the lining of the small intestine. When diagnosis is delayed, people often keep seeking care for years without answers, their symptoms persist, and complications can appear. All of that has a price, both in health and in money. The goal of this study was to estimate how much delayed diagnosis costs people with celiac disease in Iran and to identify which factors are linked to higher expenses.

    How the Study Was Carried Out

    The team ran a nationwide, cross-sectional survey between March and July of two thousand twenty-four. A total of three hundred seventy-five adults with confirmed celiac disease completed a detailed questionnaire. Participants reported when symptoms began, when they were finally diagnosed, how many times they visited general practitioners and specialists, what tests and hospital stays they had, and what they spent out of pocket. The researchers estimated costs in two ways. First, they multiplied each person’s reported use of doctor visits and tests by official two thousand twenty-four prices to build a modeled estimate. Second, they added up what participants said they actually paid, including medical bills and non-medical expenses such as travel and time lost from work. The study also used statistical models to see which characteristics were linked to higher total costs.

    Who Took Part

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    The median age was thirty years. Most respondents were women and just over half were single. People from many provinces participated, with the largest shares coming from Razavi Khorasan, Kerman, and Gilan. Across the full sample, the median delay from first symptoms to a firm diagnosis was about ten years, showing how long the diagnostic journey can be.

    How Often People Sought Care Before Diagnosis

    Before receiving a diagnosis, participants reported frequent health care use. On average, they visited general practitioners more than seven times and specialists almost five times because of symptoms that were later attributed to celiac disease. Nearly one quarter of respondents had at least one hospital stay related to complications that developed while the disease was still undiagnosed.

    What Delayed Diagnosis Cost

    When the researchers added up the expenses that people reported themselves, the average total burden per person was forty-five point eighty-seven million Iranian Toman, which is roughly five hundred seventy-three United States dollars at the exchange rate used in the study. The median self-reported total was nineteen point seventy-five million Toman, about two hundred forty-seven United States dollars. When the team calculated costs using the standardized model based on official prices for the care people said they received, the averages were higher: sixty-seven point fifty-nine million Toman on average, around eight hundred forty-nine United States dollars, with a median of thirty-seven point seventy-one million Toman, about four hundred seventy-four United States dollars.

    Who Faced Higher Costs

    Costs were not evenly distributed. Married participants, people with higher levels of education, and those who were self-employed or employed reported higher median totals. In the statistical models that account for multiple factors at once, being married and having followed a gluten-free diet for a longer time were each independently linked to higher total costs. That likely reflects that people who finally receive a diagnosis after many years may invest in more medical care to address complications and in the ongoing expense of gluten-free food, clinic follow-up, and nutrition guidance.

    Why Delays Happen

    The study echoes a common challenge around the world. Symptoms of celiac disease have shifted for many people from classic signs like ongoing diarrhea and weight loss to less obvious problems such as anemia, bone thinning, skin rashes, fatigue, and vague digestive discomfort. Those patterns can lead to years of testing without a clear answer. In Iran, delays are made worse by uneven access to endoscopy and biopsy services outside large cities, gaps in insurance coverage for key tests, and limited recognition of atypical symptoms among frontline clinicians. The result is a long path to the right diagnosis, repeated visits, repeated tests, and a greater chance of complications that require hospital care.

    Public Health Lessons

    The ten-year median delay found in this sample carries a measurable price in both health and money. The findings point to practical steps that can reduce that burden. These include screening people who are at higher risk, such as first-degree relatives of people with celiac disease and those who live with other autoimmune disorders; improving training for primary care doctors and specialists so that they recognize common and less obvious presentations; and expanding access to affordable testing in regions that currently rely on distant referral centers. The study also suggests that insurance coverage for endoscopy and biopsy, along with counseling and support for a gluten-free diet, could relieve part of the financial pressure after diagnosis.

    Strengths and Limits of the Evidence

    The study’s strengths include a large, modern sample drawn from many provinces and a two-pronged approach to costs that captures both real-world spending and a standardized estimate based on official prices. At the same time, any survey that relies on memory can be affected by imperfect recall, and costs in one country may not match those elsewhere. Because the design was cross-sectional, it cannot prove cause and effect. Even so, the consistent pattern of long delays, frequent health care use, and high totals across both cost methods makes the central message clear.

    What This Means for People with Celiac Disease

    For people who live with celiac disease or who suspect they might have it, the study underlines a crucial point: the sooner the condition is identified, the sooner damage to the intestine can begin to heal and the sooner avoidable costs can be prevented. A long delay is not only frustrating; it often leads to more appointments, more tests, missed work, and a higher chance of problems like anemia, bone loss, and hospital stays. If you have long-standing digestive symptoms, iron deficiency without a clear cause, bone thinning that seems early for your age, or a family history of celiac disease, ask your clinician directly about testing for celiac disease. For those who already have a diagnosis, the findings support seeking coverage and support for the ongoing expense of a gluten-free diet and follow-up care, because those investments protect long-term health. In short, early recognition saves money, reduces suffering, and helps people with celiac disease return more quickly to daily life with fewer complications.

    Read more at:  bmcgastroenterol.biomedcentral.com

    Watch the video version of this article:


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    elisejunker44

    Some of my symptoms started in childhood, with many visits to the school nurse (mostly after lunch) with stomach aches. Low weight, thin hair and fatigue persisted through my adult life. In my 40's I began to lose a lot of weight, terrible episodes of digestive upset, etc. Two years and many tests and bills later, gallbladder, lactose, etc with no definitive diagnoses, it took a friends suggestion to ask my doctor about an 'allergy related to wheat' she had heard about to have the proper test and be diagnosed with Celiac. By this time I had anemia, pre osteoperosis, loss of muscle tone, and ended my long time career in dance. It took many years to recover and rehabilitate. 20 years later I hope the medical system is more open to testing for this, and at a younger age. I believe in some countries they actually test before a child goes to school. I am grateful for all the changes that have come about, both in awareness and food choices for celiac. 

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    Donna Moxley

    I was not a well child and on my own would stop eating certain foods when a stomachache occurred.  As I got older, I began more and more anemic and ended up unable to hold food down at all.  Once an endoscopy occurred, doctor said I had an obstruction in my stomach but nothing said about Celiac Disease.  Dr. did stomach bypass surgery, removed a 1/3 of my stomach & removed the gallbladder.  I was in the hospital one month.  They even thought I had Pancreatic cancer and put me through the 5 biopsies of it to rule that out.  That in itself caused me to be hospitalized for a week with Pancreas issues.  All this time I am trying to hold down my fulltime job as a single mom.  Once the surgery was over, I returned to work and thought I just needed to eat "better" so I made myself whole grain sandwiches that seemed pretty "healthy" and in one minute of that first sandwich, it went straight through me and I though oh no, something went wrong with the stomach surgery.  I began to get weaker and weaker, losing weight again from extreme diarrhea.  Called my surgeon's office and they said he was on vacation, so I sought primary care assistance but they just kept taking my blood.  Finally, I went home and stayed in bed until my appt. with surgeon occurred.  By that time, a month later, my daughter took me to that appt. and had to use a wheelchair to get me in the office.  I told that surgeon I think I am dying so he said, well, with that I will put you in the hospital.  I was there a week getting upper and lower endoscopies when I saw my wonderful, great bedside manner, GI dr. I shouted out to him who I was and what room I was in and to please see me because they did not know what was wrong.  He followed through and then did the biopsy (another endoscopy) of the lower intestine and said, you have Celiac Disease and gave me 500 pages of material to read about it.  At that time, dr.'s were not or did not seem familiar with this disease.  I made a big deal out of this with them, and it seemed in a short amount of time, more and more information was being provided in the waiting rooms of the GI areas.  I was in the hospital another month but this time they paid more attention to me, thanks to my GI dr., and put me on an IV of some green nutrition to build up my system.  Once I went home, the IV remained 12 hrs. at a time with that nutrition hooked up and then eventually, they said I didn't need it and I was allowed to return to work.  I felt so much better but not quite really informed about Celiac Disease and unsure what to eat but did my best.  I later discovered, as I still had diarrhea off and on, that I am lactose intolerant and while I loved eating eggs every day, I had to give them up.  All of this occurred in 1994 and I was 50 by that time.  It is now 2025 and I am more informed on my own about my disease, what to eat that is safe and it has cost me a fortune in buying groceries that are gluten-free for those that taste ok.  I now have eczema on my right leg, another thing that can happen to Celiacs, and my right leg swells.  I am still here; I have a daughter and a retired life.  I was able to retire from my job of 25 yrs. and my employers were fantastic working with me through my absences. I believe if I, or my parents, had known what my disease was, I might have had a better chance at good health.  There is no one else in my family with this disease that I can ask if they have it - I am still here in spite of ignorance in the medical fields in San Diego in 1994.  If you or someone you know is having serious symptoms, encourage them to get the tests to find out.  Early diagnosis is still key to survival no matter what the issue is.

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