| Literature DB >> 24392300 |
Pamela R Puthoor1, Edwin F de Zoeten1.
Abstract
Ulcerative colitis (UC) is a chronic inflammatory bowel disease that has significant morbidities in the pediatric population. Goals of medical therapy include induction and maintenance of remission while preserving the colon and it's function, while minimizing the risk of treatment related morbidities. For those children who do not respond to initial therapies and progress to develop moderately-to-severely active UC, there has been a dearth of available treatments to help induce remission, necessitating long-term corticosteroid usage, with associated comorbidities of chronic steroid treatment. Significant advances have been made in medical management, including the use of biologic therapies, specifically anti-tumor necrosis factor-α monoclonal antibodies. With the Food and Drug Administration's recent approval of the use of infliximab, a chimeric anti-tumor necrosis factor-α antibody, for children ≥6 years of age with moderately-to-severely active UC, care providers now have a new treatment regimen to offer this pediatric population.Entities:
Keywords: Gastroenterology; Infliximab; Pediatric; Tumor necrosis factor-α; Ulcerative colitis
Year: 2013 PMID: 24392300 PMCID: PMC3873070 DOI: 10.1007/s13554-012-0006-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Ther ISSN: 2190-9164
Summary of pediatric studies addressing the use of infliximab for the treatment of ulcerative colitis
| Authors | Years | Number of subjects | Disease severity | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mamula et al. [ | 2002 | 9 | Mild ( | 77% ( |
| Mamula et al. [ | 2004 | 15 | 2-year follow-up of 2002 subjects ( New subjects ( | 2002 follow-up: 56% sustained response ( New subjects = 63% response at 9 months |
| Russell and Katz [ | 2004 | 14 | New fulminant diagnosis ( | New diagnosis-all acutely responded Relapse—75% ( Steroid refractory/dependent—20% ( |
| Eidelwein et al. [ | 2005 | 12 | Fulminant, steroid dependent/refractory | 75% had acute response, additional 25% partial response 67% sustained response at 10 months |
| Fanjiang et al. [ | 2007 | 27 | Acutely ill (new onset fulminant, fulminant flare) chronically ill (steroid dependent/refractory) | Acutely ill—75% responded acutely Chronically ill—27% responded acutely |
| Cucchiara et al. [ | 2008 | 22 | Severe steroid resistant UC or protracted steroid resistant/dependent | 55% had full response at 54-week follow-up (12 full responders), six with partial response, four with no response |
| Tiemi et al. [ | 2010 | 21 total IBD, | Moderate/severe (PUCAI score) | 100% clinical remission at week 22 |
| Hyams et al. [ | 2010 | 52 | Steroid refractory/dependent | 61% avoided colectomy at 24 months |
| Hyams et al. [ | 2012 | 60 | Moderate/severe (Mayo score) | 73% responded acutely, 18% (q12 week dosing) to 38% (q8 week dosing) were in remission at 54-week follow-up |
IBD inflammatory bowel diseases, PUCAI Pediatric Ulcerative Colitis Activity Index, UC ulcerative colitis
aThis study is a continuation of the Mamula study from 2002, carrying forward the seven patients that had a clinical response to infliximab