Since 1993 he has served as a full-time Professor at the Università Politecnica delle Marche in Ancona, Italy, where he currently holds the position of Head of the Department of Pediatrics and Director of the Pediatric Residency Program. He is married with Dr Eleonora Bove, a lawyer. They have a son and a daughter.
Key research activities
Carlo Catassi has made contributions to the international understanding of celiac disease epidemiology. He was main author of the first celiac disease screening project in the general population in the US. This study showed that celiac disease is much more common than previously thought, affecting around 1% of the US population, while often remaining undiagnosed. His original findings have been replicated by hundreds of studies performed all over the world. He investigated the prevalence of celiac disease in Europe, North and South America, and Middle East countries. He and his coworkers found an extremely high prevalence of celiac disease in the Saharawi population of Arab-Berber origin pointing out the importance of specific environmental and genetic factors to the disease pathophysiology. He has conducted clinical trials aimed at clarifying the minimal amount of gluten needed to trigger the small intestinal damage in patients affected with celiac disease. These milestone studies formed the basis for fixing the maximum gluten contamination allowed in gluten-free food by regulatory International Agencies like Codex Alimentarius and US-FDA. He is co-author of “Fast Facts: Celiac Disease” with Geoffrey Holmes and Alessio Fasano In recent years his research activities have focused on understanding environmental factors affecting the risk of developing celiac disease, particularly weaning patterns and other aspects of infant nutrition, along with understanding other forms of gluten-related disorders, particularly non celiac gluten sensitivity. He has guided the establishment of precise diagnostic criteria of NCGS, now known as Salerno’s criteria. Catassi and his co-workers recently have provided new insights into the age of gluten introduction for infants, along with the finding that breastfeeding does not appear to influence the risk of developing celiac disease in children.
Research studies
Four novel mutations in the lactase gene underlying congenital lactase deficiency. Celiac Disease Seems to Be on the Rise, Mainly in Elderly Lack of association between celiac disease and dental enamel hypoplasia in a case-control study from an Italian central region Age of gluten exposure impacts development of coeliac disease Risk of non-Hodgkin lymphoma in celiac disease. Coeliac disease: a potentially treatable health problem of Saharawi refugee children.
Books
Manuale SIGENP di gastroenterologia ed epatologia pediatrica