| Literature DB >> 31780764 |
Kazuhiro Takenaka1, Keiichi Tominaga2, Mimari Kanazawa1, Koh Fukushi1, Takanao Tanaka1, Akira Kanamori1,3, Takeshi Sugaya1, Kouhei Tsuchida1, Makoto Iijima1, Kenichi Goda1, Atsushi Irisawa1.
Abstract
While immunomodulators (IMs) are used as key drugs in remission maintenance treatment for ulcerative colitis (UC), there has been no evidence to date for determining monitoring methods and drug withdrawal. Therefore, we examined if a decrease in white blood cell count (WBC) and an elevation in mean cell volume (MCV) could be used as optimization indices and if mucosal healing (MH) could be a rationale for determining the time of IM withdrawal. Subjects were 89 UC patients who were using IMs and for whom clinical remission had been maintained. Those with a Rachmilewitz Clinical Activity Index score of 4 or lower and those with a Mayo endoscopic subscore (MES) of 0 or 1 were defined as MH. The remission maintenance rates of the following comparative groups were examined: an IM continuation group and an IM withdrawal group; an IM continuation group with a WBC of less than 3000 or a MCV of 100 or greater and an IM continuation group with a WBC of 3000 or greater and a MCV of 99 or lower; an IM continuation group of patients for whom MH had been achieved and an IM continuation group of patients for whom MH had not been achieved; and an IM withdrawal group with a MES of 0 and an IM withdrawal group with a MES of 1. A significantly higher remission maintenance rate was observed in the IM continuation group compared to the withdrawal group (p < 0.01). No significant difference was observed between the IM continuation group with a WBC of less than 3000 or a MCV of 100 or greater and the IM continuation group with a WBC of 3000 or greater and a MCV of 99 or lower (p = 0.08). Higher remission maintenance rates were observed in the IM continuation group of patients for whom MH had been achieved compared to the IM continuation group of patients for whom MH had not been achieved (p = 0.03). No significant difference was observed between the IM withdrawal group with MES 0 and the IM withdrawal group with MES 1. (p = 0.48). This retrospective study showed that remission maintenance could be firmly obtained by continuing IM administration in case of endoscopic MH; however, MH was not an indicator of IM withdrawal.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31780764 PMCID: PMC6882869 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-54369-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Characteristics of patients eligible for analysis.
| Mean age (range) | 44.0 (14–81) |
| Female/Male | 42/47 |
Extent of lesion (pancolitis/left-sided colitis/proctitis) | 66/23/- |
Disease type (relapse-remitting/chronic continuous/first attack) | 83/9/- |
| Duration of IM treatment (weeks) | 48.7 |
| MES (0, 1, 2) | 37/42/10 |
| Mean WBC (/ | 5250 |
| Mean MCV | 93.6 |
| IM continued/IM withdrawn | 56/33 |
Comparison of patient characteristics between the IM continued and IM withdrawn groups.
| IM continued | IM withdrawn | P value | |
|---|---|---|---|
| n = 56 | n = 33 | ||
| Mean age | 44.0 | 43.9 | NS |
| Female/Male | 30/26 | 17/16 | NS |
Extent of lesion (pancolitis/left-sided colitis/proctitis | 45/11/- | 21/12/- | NS |
Disease type (relapse-remitting/chronic continuous/first attack) | 50/6/- | 33/3/- | NS |
| Duration of IM treatment (weeks) | 57.4 | 40.2 | NS |
| MES (0, 1, 2) | 22/26/8 | 15/16/2 | NS |
| Mean WBC (/ | 5270 | 5230 | NS |
| Mean MCV | 93.4 | 93.7 | NS |
Figure 1Comparison between patients in whom IMs were withdrawn and continued groups revealed a significant difference in remission maintenance rates (p < 0.01), which was the secondary endpoint.
Comparison of patient characteristics in IM continuous group.
| Adjust | Non-Adjust | P value | MH | non-MH | P value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| n = 41 | n = 15 | n = 48 | n = 8 | |||
| Mean age | 47.6 | 47.3 | NS | 43.9 | 43.9 | NS |
| Female/Male | 19/23 | 7/7 | NS | 23/25 | 3/5 | NS |
Extent of lesion (pancolitis/left-sided colitis/proctitis) | 32/9/- | 13/2/- | NS | 38/9/- | 7/2/- | NS |
Disease type (relapse-remitting/chronic continuous/first attack) | 37/4/- | 13/2/- | NS | 42/6 | 8/-/- | NS |
| Duration of IM treatment | 48.0 | 48.8 | NS | 44.9 | 45.2 | NS |
| Mean WBC (/ | — | — | — | 5270 | 5400 | NS |
| Mean MCV | — | — | — | 93.4 | 93.8 | NS |
| MES (0, 1, 2) | 15/20/6 | 7/6/2 | NS | — | — | — |
Figure 2Comparison between the IM Adjust and Non-Adjust groups in patients with continued use of IMs revealed a significant difference in remission maintenance rates (p = 0.08), which was the secondary endpoint.
Figure 3Comparison between the MH and non-MH groups in patients with continued use of IMs revealed a significant difference in remission maintenance rates (p = 0.01), which was the secondary endpoint.
Comparison of patient characteristics between the MES 0 and MES 1 groups.
| MES 0 | MES 1 | P value | |
|---|---|---|---|
| n = 15 | n = 16 | ||
| Mean age | 43.9 | 43.8 | NS |
| Female/Male | 8/7 | 7/9 | NS |
Extent of lesion (pancolitis/left-sided colitis/proctitis) | 11/7/- | 8/5/- | NS |
Disease type (relapse-remitting/chronic continuous/first attack) | 15/-/- | 16/-/- | NS |
| Duration of IM treatment (weeks) | 41.9 | 40.5 | NS |
| Mean WBC (/ | 5200 | 5280 | NS |
| Mean MCV | 93.5 | 93.3 | NS |
Figure 4Comparison between the MES 0 and MES 1 groups among patients in whom IMs were withdrawn revealed no significant difference in remission maintenance rates (p = 0.8), which was the primary endpoint.
Figure 5Endoscopic image of Mayo endoscopic subscore (MES). (A) Endoscopic image of MES 0 (no friability and granularity and intact vascular pattern). (B) Endoscopic image of MES 1 (mild erythema or decreased vascular pattern). (C) Endoscopic image of MES 2 (marked erythema, absent vascular pattern, friability, and erosions). (D) Endoscopic image of MES 3 (spontaneous bleeding and ulceration).