| Literature DB >> 18473013 |
Raffi Karagozian1, Robert Burakoff.
Abstract
Ulcerative colitis (UC) is a chronic inflammatory condition of unclear etiology affecting the large bowel, most commonly the rectum and extending proximally in a continuous fashion. The overall principle in the pathophysiolgy of ulcerative colitis is the dysregulation of the normal immune system against an antigenic trigger leading to a prolonged mucosal inflammatory response. The diagnosing of UC is made by combining the clinical picture, tissue biopsy with the endoscopic appearance of mucosal ulceration, friable, edematous, erythematous granular appearing mucus. The approach to therapy of UC has been dependent on severity of symptoms with frontline therapy being salicylate based sulfasalazine. Newer formulations of salicylates based drugs with fewer side-effects have been developed. These are free of the sulphur component and are composed of 5-ASA, without the sulfapyridine carrier molecule. Mesalamine is one of these 5-ASA based agents that are currently available and indicated for treatment of UC. In mild/moderate active disease mesalamine has response rates between 40%-70% and remission rates of 15%-20%. Considering that the efficacy of 5-ASA is dose dependent, 4.8 g/day and 2.4 g/day have been shown to be the optimal dosages for mild-moderate distal active disease and for maintenance therapy, respectively. Patients with moderately active ulcerative colitis treated with 4.8 g/d of mesalamine are significantly more likely to achieve overall improvement at week 6 compared to patients treated with 2.4 g/d. In the setting of left-sided distal colitis (proctitis), topical (rectal) formulations have been found to be superior to oral aminosalicylates at inducing remission. Mesalamine has been shown to be safe in short term use with a dose-response efficacy without dose-related toxicity.Entities:
Keywords: 5-ASA therapy; inflammatory bowel disease; mesalamine; remission; ulcerative colitis (UC)
Year: 2007 PMID: 18473013 PMCID: PMC2376091
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ther Clin Risk Manag ISSN: 1176-6336 Impact factor: 2.423
Figure 1Clinical course of ulcerative colitis. Adapted from data: Powell-Tuck and Truelove (1963).
Classification of ulcerative colitis
| Mild | Moderate | Severe | Fulminant |
|---|---|---|---|
| Less than four stools daily with or without blood No systemic signs of toxicity Normal ESR | More than four stools daily Minimal signs of toxicity | More than six bloody stools daily Evidence of toxicity demonstrated by fever, tachycardia, anemia, elevated ESR | More than ten bowel movements Continuous bleeding Toxicity Abdominal tenderness distension Blood transfusion requirement Colonic dilatation on abdominal film |
Adapted from (Kornbluth and Sachar 2004).
Figure 2Chemical structures of 5-ASA preparations.
Different preparations of mesalamine for UC therapy
| Delayed release | Slow release | Prodrugs | Prodrugs | Topicals | Sulfasalazine | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Formulation | Asacol | Pentasa | Olsalazine | Balsalazide | Mesalamine enema | |
| Preparation | Enteric coated 400 mg | Capsule 250 mg or 500 mg | Capsule 250 mg | Capsule 750 mg | 4 g/60 ml rectal suspension 1 g rectal suppository | |
| Solubility | pH > or equal 7 | Continuous release | pH independent | pH independent | ||
| Location of delivery | Terminal ileium | Small bowel, colon | Colon | Colon | Rectum | Small bowel, colon |
| Maintenance of remission | 2–4 g/day | 2–4 g/day | 1 g/day | 2.25 g TID | 4 g/day | 2 g/day |
| Mild to moderate | 2.4 to 4.8 g/daily | 2–4 g/daily | 2–3 g/daily | 6.75 g/day | 4 g/per rectum | 3–4 g/day |
| Active disease proctitis | TID dosing | QID dosing | BID dosing | TID dosing | BID 1g/BID Active disease: 1 g BID (suppository) or 4 g enema qd or BID Maintenance:1 g supp. Daily or prn symptoms | QID dosing |
Figure 3Double blinded controlled trial of 386 patients randomized to either 2.4 g/day or 4.8 g/day for 6 weeks. Overall improvement defined as either complete resolution of signs and symptoms or a clinical response to therapy. Results demonstrated improvement in clinical parameters in 72.4% of patients treated with 4.8 g/day and 57% treated with 4.8 g/day (p = 0.0384) Adapted from data: Hanuer et al (2005).
Figure 4The combination therapy of oral and enema mesalamine treatment was shown to be superior to oral alone in terms of both remission and improvement. Improvement was defined by objective scoring method based on disease activity. Improvement was obtained in 89% of mesalamine group versus 62% of placebo group at week 4 (p = 0.0008). At week 8, 86% of mesalamine enema group versus 68% of placebo group (p = 0.026) showed improvement. Adapted from data: Marteau et al (2004).
Figure 5The combination of oral and rectal mesalamine therapy produced earlier and more complete relief of rectal bleeding than oral and rectal therapy alone. Pairwise analysis revealed that combination therapy resulted in significantly fewer days to cessation of rectal bleeding compared with either the mesalamine enema (p = 0.04 generalized Wilcoxon test) or mesalamine tablet group (p = 0.002, generalized Wilcoxon test) alone. Adapted from data: Safdi et al (1997).
Side effects of mesalamine
| Common | Rare |
|---|---|
| Headache | Interstitial nephritis |
| Diarrhea | Hepatitis |
| Bloating | Pericarditis |
| Nausea | Pancreatitis |
| Hypersensitivity | Pneumoninitis |
| Dermatitis | |
| Myocarditis | |
| Hematological disturbances | |
| Alopecia |