| Literature DB >> 22740771 |
Gia M Bradley1, Maria Oliva-Hemker.
Abstract
Ulcerative colitis is a chronic inflammatory bowel disease that can lead to derangements in the growth, nutritional status, and psychosocial development of affected children. There are several medical options for the induction and maintenance of disease remission, but the benefits of these medications need to be carefully weighed against the risks, especially in the pediatric population. As the etiology of the disease has become increasingly understood, newer therapeutic alternatives have arisen in the form of biologic therapies, which are monoclonal antibodies targeted to a specific protein or receptor. This review will discuss the classical treatments for children with ulcerative colitis, including 5-aminosalicylates, corticosteroids, thiopurine immunomodulators, and calcineurin inhibitors, with a particular focus on the newer class of anti-tumor necrosis factor-α agents.Entities:
Keywords: 5-aminosalicylates; anti-tumor necrosis factor-α agents; corticosteroids; cyclosporine; inflammatory bowel disease; thiopurine immunomodulators
Year: 2012 PMID: 22740771 PMCID: PMC3379853 DOI: 10.2147/BTT.S31833
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biologics ISSN: 1177-5475
Classes of medications used in the management of pediatric ulcerative colitis
| Medication class | Clinical indications | Common side effects |
|---|---|---|
| 5-aminosalicylates | Mild-to-moderate disease | Headaches, nausea, diarrhea, photosensitivity |
| Corticosteroids | Acute moderate-to-severe disease | Hyperglycemia, hypertension, growth failure, weight gain, osteopenia, mood disturbances |
| Thiopurine immunomodulators | Maintenance of remission of moderate-to-severe disease | Bone marrow suppression, hepatitis, pancreatitis, infections, malaise, rashes |
| Calcineurin inhibitors | Acute severe or fulminant disease | Nephrotoxicity, infections, seizures, hirsutism, hypertension, headaches |
| Antibiotics | Adjunctive therapy for active disease; pouchitis | Specific to individual antibiotics |
| Probiotics | Adjunctive therapy for active disease; recurrent pouchitis | Limited data |
| Anti-TNF-α agents | Induction and maintenance of remission of moderate-to- severe disease | Hypersensitivity reactions, headaches, nausea, abdominal pain, infections |
Abbreviation: TNF-α, tumor necrosis factor-α.
Case series reporting the use of infliximab in the treatment of pediatric ulcerative colitis
| Authors | Study population | Outcomes measured | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mamula et al | 9 children | Clinical response (LCAI, PGA) at 2 days and 2 weeks | Median LCAI score decreased from 11 before infusion to 1 at 2 days and 2 weeks after infusion; decreased disease activity in 7 patients by PGA |
| Mamula et al | 17 children | Avoidance of colectomy or escalation of medical therapy | 14 patients with short-term response; 10 of 16 patients with sustained response (>9 months) |
| Russell and Katz | 14 children | Clinical response (LCAI) by week 6 | 9 patients with sustained decrease of LCAI to ≤2 |
| Eidelwein et al | 12 children | Clinical response (PGA) | 9 patients with complete short-term response at 2 weeks, 3 with partial response; 8 patients with long-term response at 6 months |
| Fanjiang et al | 27 children | Clinical response (LCAI); avoidance of colectomy and CSs | Successful treatment in 75% of acutely ill and 27% of chronically ill patients; mean follow-up 27 months |
| Cucchiara et al | 22 children | Clinical response (LCAI) by week 54 | 12 responders, 6 partial responders, 4 nonresponders; 7 patients required colectomy |
| McGinnis and Murray | 40 children | Clinical response (Truelove and Witts criteria) | 28 responders, median follow-up 19 months |
| Hyams et al | 52 children | Clinical response (PGA) | CS-free inactive disease in 26%, 27%, 38%, and 21% of patients at 3, 6, 12, and 24 months |
| Tiemi et al | 21 children (7 UC, 14 CD) | Clinical response (clinical manifestations, disease activity indices, CS use) by week 22 | 18 patients in remission, 3 patients with clinical improvement; significant improvement in disease activity indices; 6 of 15 patients discontinued CSs |
| Hyams et al | 60 children | Clinical response (disease activity indices) by week 8 | 44 responders |
Abbreviations: LCAI, Lichtiger colitis activity index; PGA, physician global assessment; CS, corticosteroid; UC, ulcerative colitis; CD, Crohn’s disease.