| Literature DB >> 32010877 |
Paul Moayyedi1, Eric I Benchimol2,3, David Armstrong1, Cathy Yuan1, Aida Fernandes1, Grigorios I Leontiadis1.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: Biosimilars; Canadian Association of Gastroenterology; Crohn’s Colitis Canada; Inflammatory bowel disease
Year: 2019 PMID: 32010877 PMCID: PMC6985688 DOI: 10.1093/jcag/gwz035
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Can Assoc Gastroenterol ISSN: 2515-2084
Position statements reached by other groups on the use of biosimilars
| Group | Year | Use in naïve patients | Switch for those already on originator | Automatic substitution |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CAG | 2013 | Await studies | No | No |
| ECCO | 2013 | Await studies | No | No |
| Spanish Society of Gastroenterology | 2013 | Yes | No | No |
| Polish National Consultant in Gastroenterology | 2014 | Yes | No | No |
| Italian IBD group | 2014 | Yes | Await studies | No |
| British Society of Gastroenterology | 2015 | Yes | Yes | No |
| NHS Wales | 2015 | Yes (patient doctor choice) | Yes (patient doctor choice) | No |
| ESPGHAN | 2015 | Yes | No | No |
| Belgian IBD Research Group | 2015 | Yes | No | No |
| OAG | 2016 | No | No | No |
| ECCO | 2017 | Yes | Yes (patient and doctor choice) | No |
| ESPGHAN | 2019 | Yes | Yes | No |
| Crohn’s and Colitis Foundation | 2019 | Yes | Yes (patient doctor choice) | No |
| CCC | 2019 | Yes | Yes (patient doctor choice) | No |
| BC Pharmacare | 2019 | Yes | Yes | Yes |
BC, British Columbia; CAG, Canadian Gastroenterology Association; CCC, Crohn’s Colitis Canada; ECCO, European Crohn’s and Colitis Organization; ESPGHAN, European Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology Hepatology and Nutrition; IBD, Inflammatory bowel disease; NHS, National health service; OAG, Ontario Gastroenterology Association.
CT-P13 compared to infliximab originator for active Crohn’s disease naive to anti-TNF therapy: summary of findings table
| Certainty assessment | No. of patients | Effect | Certainty | Importance | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. of studies | Study design | Risk of bias | Inconsistency | Indirectness | Imprecision | Other considerations | CT-P13 | infliximab originator | Relative (95% CI) | Absolute (95% CI) | ||
|
| ||||||||||||
| 1 | Randomised trials | Not serious | Not serious | Not serious | Very serious a | None | 77/111 (69.4%) | 81/109 (74.3%) |
|
| ⨁⨁◯◯ LOW | CRITICAL |
|
| ||||||||||||
| 1 | Observational studies | Very serious b | Not serious | Not serious | Not serious | None | 312/2499 (12.5%) | 406/2551 (15.9%) |
|
| ⨁⨁◯◯ LOW | CRITICAL |
|
| ||||||||||||
| 1 | Observational studies | Serious b | Not serious | Not serious | Serious c | None | 83/2499 (3.3%) | 115/2551 (4.5%) |
|
| ⨁⨁◯◯ LOW | CRITICAL |
CI, confidence interval; HR, hazard ratio explanations; RR, risk ratio.
aPossibility that CT-P13 is up to 15% less effective than infliximab originator. This was felt to be an important difference when substituting one drug for a similar drug.
bDecision to use CT-P13 was up to patient and clinician.
c95% CI include important differences in safety.
Figure 1.Randomized controlled trials of switch to a biosimilar compared to continuing with originator infliximab in inflammatory bowel disease patients: proportion not in remission at 1 year.
Figure 2.Randomized controlled trials of switch to a biosimilar compared to continuing with originator infliximab in inflammatory bowel disease patients: proportion with loss of response or worsening disease.
Figure 3.Adverse events in cohort studies of switch to a biosimilar compared to continuing with originator infliximab in inflammatory bowel disease patients.
Nonmedical switching to CT-P13 compared to continuing on infliximab originator for stable IBD on originator infliximab: summary of findings table
| Certainty assessment | No. of patients | Effect | Certainty | Importance | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. of studies | Study design | Risk of bias | Inconsistency | Indirectness | Imprecision | Other considerations | CT-P13 | infliximab originator | Relative (95% CI) | Absolute (95% CI) | ||
|
| ||||||||||||
| 2 | Randomised trials | Serious a | Not serious | Not serious | Serious b | None | 73/234 (31.2%) | 59/214 (27.6%) |
|
| ⨁⨁◯◯ LOW | CRITICAL |
|
| ||||||||||||
| 2 | randomised trials | serious a | not serious | serious c | serious b | none | 57/234 (24.4%) | 33/214 (15.4%) |
|
| ⨁◯◯◯ VERY LOW | CRITICAL |
|
| ||||||||||||
| 2 | Observational studies | Serious d | Not serious | Serious c | Serious b | None | 33/142 (23.2%) | 29/151 (19.2%) |
|
| ⨁◯◯◯ VERY LOW | CRITICAL |
CI, confidence interval; RR, risk ratio.
aOne of the two trials had an unclear risk of bias.
b95% CI wide with number of events < 250.
cEach trial defined loss of response differently.
dTwo observational studies where decision to switch to CT-P13 is up to patient and clinician.