Prashant Kotwani1, Jonathan Terdiman1, Sara Lewin1. 1. University of California San Francisco, Department of Medicine, Division of Gastroenterology, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Acute severe ulcerative colitis is a high stakes event with significant numbers still requiring emergent colectomy, representing a need to establish alternative medical management options. We report a case series of tofacitinib as rescue therapy in biologic-experienced patients with acute severe ulcerative colitis. METHODS: Four patients were identified over a 1-year period at our institution who initiated tofacitinib for acute severe ulcerative colitis. All four had previously failed at least two biologics, including infliximab, and were failing high-dose oral prednisone therapy before admission. All patients had Mayo disease activity index of at least 10 at admission. After no significant improvement despite receiving a minimum of 3 days of intravenous methylprednisolone and based on elevated Ho and Travis indices at Day 3, patients were offered rescue tofacitinib for induction of remission, or colectomy. Standard induction of tofacitinib was used [10 mg twice daily], and one patient was escalated to 15 mg twice daily after inadequate response. RESULTS: All patients experienced improvement in objective symptoms and laboratory markers, and were discharged without colectomy on tofacitinib as maintenance therapy and prednisone taper; 30-day and 90-day colectomy rates on tofacitinib maintenance therapy were zero and 90-day readmission rate was also zero. Two of four patients achieved steroid-free remission on maintenance tofacitinib monotherapy based on clinical symptoms and follow-up endoscopy. No major adverse reaction was reported during induction or maintenance therapy. CONCLUSIONS: Tofacitinib may be an acceptable rescue agent in biologic-experienced patients with acute severe ulcerative colitis. Tofacitinib may also be safely continued as maintenance therapy once remission has been achieved.
BACKGROUND: Acute severe ulcerative colitis is a high stakes event with significant numbers still requiring emergent colectomy, representing a need to establish alternative medical management options. We report a case series of tofacitinib as rescue therapy in biologic-experienced patients with acute severe ulcerative colitis. METHODS: Four patients were identified over a 1-year period at our institution who initiated tofacitinib for acute severe ulcerative colitis. All four had previously failed at least two biologics, including infliximab, and were failing high-dose oral prednisone therapy before admission. All patients had Mayo disease activity index of at least 10 at admission. After no significant improvement despite receiving a minimum of 3 days of intravenous methylprednisolone and based on elevated Ho and Travis indices at Day 3, patients were offered rescue tofacitinib for induction of remission, or colectomy. Standard induction of tofacitinib was used [10 mg twice daily], and one patient was escalated to 15 mg twice daily after inadequate response. RESULTS: All patients experienced improvement in objective symptoms and laboratory markers, and were discharged without colectomy on tofacitinib as maintenance therapy and prednisone taper; 30-day and 90-day colectomy rates on tofacitinib maintenance therapy were zero and 90-day readmission rate was also zero. Two of four patients achieved steroid-free remission on maintenance tofacitinib monotherapy based on clinical symptoms and follow-up endoscopy. No major adverse reaction was reported during induction or maintenance therapy. CONCLUSIONS:Tofacitinib may be an acceptable rescue agent in biologic-experienced patients with acute severe ulcerative colitis. Tofacitinib may also be safely continued as maintenance therapy once remission has been achieved.
Authors: Jeffrey A Berinstein; Jessica L Sheehan; Michael Dias; Elliot M Berinstein; Calen A Steiner; Laura A Johnson; Randolph E Regal; John I Allen; Kelly C Cushing; Ryan W Stidham; Shrinivas Bishu; Jami A R Kinnucan; Shirley A Cohen-Mekelburg; Akbar K Waljee; Peter D R Higgins Journal: Clin Gastroenterol Hepatol Date: 2021-05-25 Impact factor: 11.382
Authors: Shahida Din; Alexandra Kent; Richard C Pollok; Susanna Meade; Nicholas A Kennedy; Ian Arnott; R Mark Beattie; Felix Chua; Rachel Cooney; Robin J Dart; James Galloway; Daniel R Gaya; Subrata Ghosh; Mark Griffiths; Laura Hancock; Richard Hansen; Ailsa Hart; Christopher Andrew Lamb; Charlie W Lees; Jimmy K Limdi; James O Lindsay; Kamal Patel; Nick Powell; Charles D Murray; Chris Probert; Tim Raine; Christian Selinger; Shaji Sebastian; Philip J Smith; Phil Tozer; Andrew Ustianowski; Lisa Younge; Mark A Samaan; Peter M Irving Journal: Gut Date: 2020-06-08 Impact factor: 23.059