BACKGROUND:Patients with moderately to severely active ulcerative colitis occasionally do not respond to or lose initial response to maintenance dosing of anti-TNF therapy. AIM: To report the efficacy of escalation from every other week (EOW) to weekly adalimumab dosing in patients from the clinical trial ULTRA 2 (NCT00408629), by week 8 response (i.e. response after adalimumab induction therapy). METHODS:Week 52 remission, response, and mucosal healing rates were assessed in ULTRA 2 adalimumab-randomised patients who escalated to weekly dosing. Patients were stratified by week 8 response per partial Mayo score. Kaplan-Meier and logistic regression analyses estimated time to weekly dosing and defined predictors of escalation to weekly dosing, respectively. Adverse events were reported for patients receiving open-label adalimumab. RESULTS: The rate of escalation to weekly dosing was 16.3% (20/123) for week 8 responders and 38.4% (48/125) for week 8 nonresponders. Week 52 remission, response and mucosal healing rates with weekly dosing were 20%, 45%, and 45% for week 8 responders and 2.1%, 25% and 29.2% for nonresponders, respectively (NRI). The median time to weekly dosing was 288 days for week 8 nonresponders and not estimable for responders. Prior anti-TNF use was a significant predictor of escalation to weekly dosing. Treatment-emergent adverse event rates were similar for patients receiving open-label EOW or weekly adalimumab. CONCLUSIONS: Escalation to weekly adalimumab dosing demonstrated clinical benefits for patients who lost response to therapy and may be beneficial for patients not initially responding to induction therapy. No new safety risks were identified with weekly dosing.
RCT Entities:
BACKGROUND:Patients with moderately to severely active ulcerative colitis occasionally do not respond to or lose initial response to maintenance dosing of anti-TNF therapy. AIM: To report the efficacy of escalation from every other week (EOW) to weekly adalimumab dosing in patients from the clinical trial ULTRA 2 (NCT00408629), by week 8 response (i.e. response after adalimumab induction therapy). METHODS: Week 52 remission, response, and mucosal healing rates were assessed in ULTRA 2 adalimumab-randomised patients who escalated to weekly dosing. Patients were stratified by week 8 response per partial Mayo score. Kaplan-Meier and logistic regression analyses estimated time to weekly dosing and defined predictors of escalation to weekly dosing, respectively. Adverse events were reported for patients receiving open-label adalimumab. RESULTS: The rate of escalation to weekly dosing was 16.3% (20/123) for week 8 responders and 38.4% (48/125) for week 8 nonresponders. Week 52 remission, response and mucosal healing rates with weekly dosing were 20%, 45%, and 45% for week 8 responders and 2.1%, 25% and 29.2% for nonresponders, respectively (NRI). The median time to weekly dosing was 288 days for week 8 nonresponders and not estimable for responders. Prior anti-TNF use was a significant predictor of escalation to weekly dosing. Treatment-emergent adverse event rates were similar for patients receiving open-label EOW or weekly adalimumab. CONCLUSIONS: Escalation to weekly adalimumab dosing demonstrated clinical benefits for patients who lost response to therapy and may be beneficial for patients not initially responding to induction therapy. No new safety risks were identified with weekly dosing.
Authors: Carlos Taxonera; Eva Iglesias; Fernando Muñoz; Marta Calvo; Manuel Barreiro-de Acosta; David Busquets; Xavier Calvet; Antonio Rodríguez; Ramón Pajares; Javier P Gisbert; Pilar López-Serrano; José Luís Pérez-Calle; Ángel Ponferrada; Cristóbal De la Coba; Fernando Bermejo; María Chaparro; David Olivares; Cristina Alba; Ignacio Fernández-Blanco Journal: Dig Dis Sci Date: 2016-12-19 Impact factor: 3.199
Authors: Marla C Dubinsky; Joel Rosh; William A Faubion; Jaroslaw Kierkus; Frank Ruemmele; Jeffrey S Hyams; Samantha Eichner; Yao Li; Bidan Huang; Nael M Mostafa; Andreas Lazar; Roopal B Thakkar Journal: Inflamm Bowel Dis Date: 2016-04 Impact factor: 5.325
Authors: Mark A Samaan; Polychronis Pavlidis; Jonathan Digby-Bell; Emma L Johnston; Angad Dhillon; Ramesh Paramsothy; Abisoye O Akintimehin; Lucy Medcalf; Guy Chung-Faye; Patrick DuBois; Ioannis Koumoutsos; Nick Powell; Simon H C Anderson; Jeremy Sanderson; Bu' Hussain Hayee; Peter M Irving Journal: Frontline Gastroenterol Date: 2017-10-11