BACKGROUND: The efficacy of adalimumab in maintaining remission in Crohn's disease patients may wane over time, leading to secondary loss of response that is often managed with dose escalation. However, the response to adalimumab dose escalation and long-term outcomes after escalation have not been well evaluated. AIMS: To characterise the short- and long-term clinical responses to adalimumab dose escalation for secondary loss of response. METHODS: A retrospective cohort study evaluating Crohn's disease out-patients requiring adalimumab dose escalation for secondary loss of response from 2003 to 2013 was conducted. The primary outcome was the proportion of patients achieving symptomatic clinical response to dose escalation and subsequent development of tertiary loss of response. Duration of regained response was assessed by Kaplan-Meier analysis. RESULTS: Ninety-two CD patients met inclusion criteria with mean duration of follow-up of 170.2 weeks (±129.6 weeks). Disease distribution was predominantly ileal (37/92, 40.2%) or ileocolonic (43/92, 46.7%), with equal distribution of inflammatory (34.8%), stricturing (27.2%), and penetrating (38.0%) disease phenotypes. At 24 weeks post-dose escalation, 74/92 (80.4%) patients had symptomatic clinical response. Among responders, median duration of sustained response was 69.2 weeks (IQR 29.4-107.1) but 42/74 (56.8%) responders experienced subsequent tertiary loss of response at a median time of 47.9 weeks (IQR 24.7-80.3). C-reactive protein >10.0 mg/L at the time of dose escalation predicted tertiary loss of response in univariate analysis (OR 3.32, 95% CI: 1.18-9.37). CONCLUSIONS: In patients with Crohn's disease, adalimumab dose escalation is effective for recapturing symptomatic response after secondary loss of response, but more than half will eventually experience a tertiary loss of response.
BACKGROUND: The efficacy of adalimumab in maintaining remission in Crohn's diseasepatients may wane over time, leading to secondary loss of response that is often managed with dose escalation. However, the response to adalimumab dose escalation and long-term outcomes after escalation have not been well evaluated. AIMS: To characterise the short- and long-term clinical responses to adalimumab dose escalation for secondary loss of response. METHODS: A retrospective cohort study evaluating Crohn's disease out-patients requiring adalimumab dose escalation for secondary loss of response from 2003 to 2013 was conducted. The primary outcome was the proportion of patients achieving symptomatic clinical response to dose escalation and subsequent development of tertiary loss of response. Duration of regained response was assessed by Kaplan-Meier analysis. RESULTS: Ninety-two CD patients met inclusion criteria with mean duration of follow-up of 170.2 weeks (±129.6 weeks). Disease distribution was predominantly ileal (37/92, 40.2%) or ileocolonic (43/92, 46.7%), with equal distribution of inflammatory (34.8%), stricturing (27.2%), and penetrating (38.0%) disease phenotypes. At 24 weeks post-dose escalation, 74/92 (80.4%) patients had symptomatic clinical response. Among responders, median duration of sustained response was 69.2 weeks (IQR 29.4-107.1) but 42/74 (56.8%) responders experienced subsequent tertiary loss of response at a median time of 47.9 weeks (IQR 24.7-80.3). C-reactive protein >10.0 mg/L at the time of dose escalation predicted tertiary loss of response in univariate analysis (OR 3.32, 95% CI: 1.18-9.37). CONCLUSIONS: In patients with Crohn's disease, adalimumab dose escalation is effective for recapturing symptomatic response after secondary loss of response, but more than half will eventually experience a tertiary loss of response.
Authors: Johannes P D Schultheiss; Remi Mahmoud; Jonas M Louwers; Michiel T van der Kaaij; Boris P van Hellemondt; Petra G van Boeckel; Nofel Mahmmod; Bindia Jharap; Herma H Fidder; Bas Oldenburg Journal: Aliment Pharmacol Ther Date: 2021-09-24 Impact factor: 9.524
Authors: Candace L Beilman; Nguyen Xuan Thanh; Victoria Ung; Christopher Ma; Karen Wong; Karen I Kroeker; Thomas Lee; Haili Wang; Arto Ohinmaa; Phil Jacobs; Brendan P Halloran; Richard N Fedorak Journal: Can J Gastroenterol Hepatol Date: 2016-10-03
Authors: Mark Samaan; Samantha Campbell; Georgina Cunningham; Aravind Gokul Tamilarasan; Peter M Irving; Sara McCartney Journal: F1000Res Date: 2019-07-29