| Literature DB >> 28533919 |
Keith S Sultan1, Joshua C Berkowitz1, Sundas Khan1.
Abstract
Biologic therapies such as infliximab and adalimumab have become mainstays of treatment for inflammatory bowel disease. Early studies suggested that combination therapy (CT) with infliximab and an immunomodulator drug such as azathioprine may help optimize biologic pharmacokinetics, minimize immunogenicity, and improve outcomes. The landmark SONIC trial in Crohn's disease and the UC SUCCESS trial in ulcerative colitis demonstrated CT with infliximab and azathioprine to be superior to monotherapy with either agent alone at inducing clinical remission in treatment naïve patients with moderate to severe disease. However, many unanswered questions linger. The role of CT in non-naive patients as well as the optimal duration of CT remains unknown. The effectiveness of CT with alternate biologics and/or alternate immunomodulators is not as clear, and it is unknown whether SONIC's conclusions can be extrapolated beyond infliximab and azathioprine. Also looming are the risks of CT including opportunistic infection and malignancy; specifically, lymphoma. This review lays out the evidence as it pertains to the risks and benefits of CT as well as the areas that require further research. With this information in hand, the practitioner may develop a treatment strategy that best suits each individual patient.Entities:
Keywords: Adalimumab; Azathioprine; Crohn’s disease; Inflammatory bowel disease; Infliximab; Methotrexate; Ulcerative colitis; Vedolizumab
Year: 2017 PMID: 28533919 PMCID: PMC5421108 DOI: 10.4292/wjgpt.v8.i2.103
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Gastrointest Pharmacol Ther ISSN: 2150-5349
Author’s summary of the evidence for combination therapy
| IFX + AZA/6MP (treatment naïve) | + | + | + | + |
| IFX + AZA/6MP (step-up from immunomodulator monotherapy) | - | NA | NA | NA |
| IFX + MTX | +/- | + | NA | NA |
| ADA + IMM | +/- | +/- | NA | NA |
| VDZ + IMM | NA | + | NA | NA |
| Ustekinumab + | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| IMM | ||||
IFX: Infliximab; AZA: Azathioprine; 6-MP: 6-mercaptopurine; MTX: Methotrexate; ADA: Adalimumab; VDZ: Vedolizumab; IMM: immunomodulatory; +: beneficial; +/-: Possible benefit; NA: No adequate data available.
Summary: Major society guidelines addressing combination therapy
| American College of Gastroenterology (2009 CD, 2010 UC) | IFX or IFX and AZA superior to AZA | Unknown efficacy of CT |
| European Crohn’s and Colitis Organization and World Congress of Gastroenterology (2011) | IFX and AZA superior to monotherapy (in treatment naïve) | Unknown efficacy of CT |
| American Gastroenterological Association (CD guidelines (2013) | Anti-TNF-α and AZA superior to monotherapy | |
| American Gastroenterological Association Clinical Care Pathways (2014 CD, 2015 UC) | Consider IMM with anti-TNF-α or 2nd/3rd line biologic | Consider IMM with all anti-TNF-α or VDZ use |
| Hong Kong IBD Society (2013) | Anti-TNF-α and AZA superior to monotherapy | CT not addressed |
| Indian Society of Gastroenterology (UC consensus) | CT not addressed | |
| Asian Pacific Association of Gastroenterology (UC consensus) | CT not addressed | |
| Japanese Society of Gastroenterology (CD guidelines) | CT Not addressed |
IFX: Infliximab; AZA: Azathioprine; IMM: Immunomodulator (includes AZA, 6-mercaptopurine, Methotrexate); VDZ: Vedolizumab; CT: Combination therapy; UC: Ulcerative colitis; CD: Crohn’s disease.