Literature DB >> 33070332

Switching Australian patients with moderate to severe inflammatory bowel disease from originator to biosimilar infliximab: a multicentre, parallel cohort study.

Craig Haifer1,2, Ashish Srinivasan3,4, Yoon-Kyo An5,6, Sherman Picardo7, Daniel van Langenberg3,4, Shankar Menon7, Jakob Begun5,8, Simon Ghaly1,9, Lena Thin10,11.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To examine whether non-medical switching of patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) from originator infliximab to a biosimilar (CT-P13, Inflectra) is safe and clinically non-inferior to continued treatment with originator infliximab.
DESIGN: Prospective, open label, multicentre, parallel cohort, non-inferiority study in seven Australian hospitals over 48 weeks, May 2017 - October 2019. PARTICIPANTS: Adults (18 years or older) with IBD receiving maintenance originator infliximab (Remicade) who had been in steroid-free clinical remission for at least 12 weeks. INTERVENTION: Managed program for switching patients in four hospitals from originator to biosimilar infliximab (CT-P13); patients in three other hospitals continued to receive originator infliximab (control). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Clinical disease worsening requiring infliximab dose escalation or change in therapy.
RESULTS: The switch group included 204 patients, the control group 141 patients with IBD. Ten patients in the control group (7%) and 16 patients switched to CT-P13 (8%) experienced clinical deterioration; the adjusted risk difference (control v switch group) was -1.1 percentage points (95% CI, -6.1 to 8.2 percentage points), within our pre-specified non-inferiority margin of 15 percentage points. Serious adverse events leading to infliximab discontinuation were infrequent in both the switch (six, 3%) and control (six, 4%) groups.
CONCLUSION: Switching patients with IBD from originator to biosimilar infliximab is safe and non-inferior to continuing treatment with originator infliximab. Moreover, the introduction of biosimilar infliximab, by increasing market competition, has resulted in substantial cost savings for the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme.
© 2020 AMPCo Pty Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Crohn’s disease; Inflammatory bowel diseases; Pharmacovigilance

Year:  2020        PMID: 33070332     DOI: 10.5694/mja2.50824

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med J Aust        ISSN: 0025-729X            Impact factor:   7.738


  1 in total

1.  State-of-the-art surgery for Crohn's disease: Part I-small intestine/ileal disease.

Authors:  Sandra L Kavalukas; Katharina M Scheurlen; Susan Galandiuk
Journal:  Langenbecks Arch Surg       Date:  2021-11-04       Impact factor: 3.445

  1 in total

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