USA TODAY US Edition

Gluten found in ‘gluten-free’ foods

New study takes closer look at restaurant­s.

- Zlati Meyer

About a year ago Jessica Mahar, who was diagnosed with celiac disease around 2005, got sick from a local restaurant because the menu said the dish was served with gluten-free brown rice, but in fact was served with gluten-containing farro.

Even if a restaurant menu says an item is gluten free, new research says there’s a good chance some gluten will end up on your plate. Thirty-two percent of restaurant foods labeled gluten-free contain gluten, according to a new study published in the American Journal of Gastroente­rology.

Eating gluten, a protein found in some grains, is dangerous for some people, while for others with gluten intoleranc­e or gluten sensitivit­y, doing so causes a range of painful and embarrassi­ng consequenc­es. Symptoms include abdominal bloating, chronic diarrhea or constipati­on, vomiting, fatigue and gas.

“You always take a risk. At the same time, a lot of restaurant­s are trying to cater to people with all different kinds of dietary needs,” said Marhar, an executive at a not-for-profit. “I’m not scared, but... simple ingredient­s are easier to keep track of.”

The researcher­s also found:

❚ The worst offenders were pizza and pasta, with gluten found in 53.2% of pizza samples and 50.8% of the pasta tested.

❚ The detection rate was higher at dinner, 34%, than at breakfast, 27.2%.

❚ Restaurant foods labeled glutenfree, or GF, were less likely to test positive for gluten in the western part of the U.S. than in the Northeast.

❚ Restaurant­s identified as fast-casual (no table service, higher quality food than traditiona­l fast-food eateries) and casual (with table service) had lower detection rates than fast-food places. No restaurant­s were cited by name. The portable gluten tester Nima was used in the study.

Its manufactur­er has ties to the some of the authors from Columbia University and a company co-founder is among the authors.

“We all want people to be vigilant, but not too worried,” said lead author Dr. Benjamin Lerner.

“If you have celiac disease or it’s harmful for you to ingest gluten, you should feel comfortabl­e asking the waiter how things are prepared.”

A Nima device uses a pea-sized sample of food to test if gluten is present; it detects gluten at levels below 20 parts per million.

Under a U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion regulation that took effect in 2014, a food must contain less than 20 parts per million of gluten if the manufactur­er wants to label it gluten-free.

The researcher­s’ results may not be reflective of all gluten-free restaurant food, the Celiac Disease Foundation said in a statement about the study.

“Nima users may have been more likely to test foods they suspected were contaminat­ed, potentiall­y resulting in a larger proportion of foods testing positive. However, these results are compelling evidence of the challenges of maintainin­g a strict, gluten-free diet.”

An estimated 1 out of 100 people worldwide has celiac disease, according to the National Institutes of Health. Plus, Mayo Clinic research in 2017 found that 3.1 million Americans avoid gluten, though they don’t have celiac – a number that tripled between 2009 and 2014.

The global gluten-free product market, worth an estimated $4.72 billion in 2017, is expected to reach about $7.6 billion by 2024, according to New Yorkbased Zion Market Research.

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