| Literature DB >> 33147899 |
Eron Fabio Miranda1, Rodrigo Bremer Nones2, Paulo Gustavo Kotze1.
Abstract
With the overspread use of measurement of serum levels of anti-tumor necrosis factor (TNF) agents (therapeutic drug monitoring, TDM), new therapeutic strategies have been used in the management of Crohn's disease (CD). Different targets are correlated with increased levels of circulating drugs. Recent evidence demonstrated that higher serum levels of anti-TNF agents may be associated to better outcomes in perianal fistulizing CD (PFCD). Overall, patients with healed fistulas had higher serum levels of infliximab and adalimumab as compared to those with active drainage. This was demonstrated in some cohort studies, in induction and maintenance, in adults and children with PFCD. In this narrative review, authors summarize current evidence on the use of serum level measurement of anti-TNF agents and its correlation with perianal fistula healing in CD patients. Data on the use of TDM in PFCD is discussed in detail. The retrospective design of the studies and the lack of objective parameters to measure fistula healing are the main limitations of published data. Prospective studies, with central reading of objective radiological parameters, such as pelvic magnetic resonance imaging scores, can improve the level of evidence on the possible advantages of TDM in perianal fistula in CD and are warranted.Entities:
Keywords: Crohn disease; Fistula; Tumor necrosis factor-alpha
Year: 2020 PMID: 33147899 PMCID: PMC8322024 DOI: 10.5217/ir.2020.00029
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intest Res ISSN: 1598-9100
Main Characteristics of Studies with Data Correlating Serum Levels of Anti-TNF Agents (Measured at Trough with IFX and at Any Moment with ADA) with Healing of Perianal Fistulas
| Author (year) | Population | No. of patients | Timing of TDM | Anti-TNF agent | Outcome definition | Drug concentration in healed/closed fistulas (μg/mL) | Drug concentration in active fistulas (μg/mL) | Target serum level defined for outcome (μg/mL) | Observations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yarur et al. (2016) [ | Adults | 117 | NR | IFX | Primary: fistula healing (absence of drainage and no seton) | 15.8 (9.9–27.0) | 4.4 (0–9.8) | ≥ 10.1 | Single-center, cross-sectional retrospective study |
| Secondary: fistula closure (no skin opening and mucosal healing) | |||||||||
| Strik et al. (2019) [ | Adults | 47 IFX | NR | IFX | Fistula closure (no drainage with finger compression or fibrotic tract at MRI) | 6.0 (5.4–6.9) | 2.3 (1.1–4.0) | ≥5 | Single-center, cross-sectional retrospective study |
| 19 ADA | ADA | 7.4 (6.5–10.8) | 4.8 (1.7–6.2) | ≥ 5.9 | |||||
| Davidov et al. (2016) [ | Adults | 36 | wk 2 | IFX | Fistula closure (absence of a previously detected fistula opening) | 20.0 (16.2–26.3) | 5.6 (2.8–9.2) | ≥ 9.25 | 2 Centers, retrospective cohort study, Proactive TDM |
| wk 6 | 13.3 (7.6–19.0) | 2.6 (0.4–7.0) | ≥ 7.25 | ||||||
| wk 14 | 4.1 (0.7–5.7) | 0.1 (0.01–2.3) | - | ||||||
| Ruemmele et al. (2018) [ | Pediatric | 36 | wk 16 | ADA | Fistula closure (closure of all baseline fistulas) and fistula improvement (decrease in ≥ 50% fistulas) in 2 consecutive visits | 7.4 (1.8–13.0) | 7.0 (2.0–13.0) | - | Multicentric, prospective randomized pivotal study |
| wk 52 | 10.0 (3.0–17.0) | 6.1 (0.9–11.3) | - | ||||||
| El-Matary et al. (2018) [ | Pediatric | 27 | wk 14 | IFX | Fistula healing (closure of previous fistula reported by treating physician) | 12.7 (6.6–15.5) | 5.4 (2.7–8.4) | ≥ 12.7 | Multicentric, prospective inception cohort study |
| Plevris et al. (2019) [ | Adults | 29 IFX | NR | IFX | Primary: fistula healing (absence of drainage and no seton) | 8.1 | 3.2 | ≥ 7.1 | Single-center, cross-sectional retrospective study |
| 35 ADA | ADA | Secondary: fistula closure (absence of skin fistula opening) | 12.6 | 2.7 | ≥ 6.8 |
Values are presented as mean (range).
TNF, tumor necrosis factor; IFX, infliximab; ADA, adalimumab; TDM, therapeutic drug monitoring; NR, not reported; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging.