Narrative review suggests gluten-free diet may help Hashimoto's in Celiac patients but evidence is insufficient for universal use
This narrative review evaluates the impact of a gluten-free diet (GFD) on patients with Celiac disease, Hashimoto's thyroiditis, or both. The scope includes assessing whether gluten acts as a universal trigger or merely a candidate modifier in Hashimoto's thyroiditis. The authors emphasize that causality is not established for all cases.
The primary synthesized finding indicates that patients with comorbid Celiac disease and Hashimoto's thyroiditis may gain indirect thyroid-related benefits as intestinal inflammation improves. However, the review concludes that evidence remains insufficient to recommend routine gluten withdrawal for all patients with non-celiac Hashimoto's thyroiditis. No specific effect sizes or absolute numbers were reported for these outcomes.
The authors highlight that long-term GFD carries practical and nutritional burdens that require professional supervision. Limitations include the insufficient evidence to support universal gluten restriction and the lack of reported data on adverse events or specific study populations. The review suggests targeted screening for Celiac disease or other gluten-related disorders in selected Hashimoto's patients, followed by individualized dietary counseling rather than universal restriction.