| Literature DB >> 34670875 |
Jia-Feng Wu1,2.
Abstract
During the past decade, we have entered an era of biologics for the treatment of Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis. The therapeutic goal of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) management has evolved from symptom control and clinical remission to mucosal healing or even deep remission. Histological remission for ulcerative colitis and transmural healing of Crohn's disease are potential future goals. With the adoption of the treat-to-target concept, and given the need for tight control of IBD activity, therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) is an important element of precision medicine. TDM involves the measurement of serum biologics and anti-drug antibodies levels, to confirm whether the right drug with the right dosage was prescribed to reach the right serum levels. TDM may help clinicians adjust biologics based on objective biomarkers instead of using empirical dosage escalation or making symptom-based therapeutic adjustments. Well-established reactive TDM algorithms have been proposed, and emerging evidence supports the clinical application of a proactive TDM strategy to enhance the duration of effective biologics and improve clinical outcomes. Recently, the proactive TDM strategy was shown to avoid the secondary loss of response to biologics, and improve long-term clinical outcomes in IBD patients. This review summarizes data from trials, and practice guidelines, on the clinical application of proactive and reactive TDM strategies for the daily care of biologic-treated IBD patients.Entities:
Keywords: Biologics; Crohn̕s disease; Inflammatory bowel disease; Therapeutic drug monitoring; Ulcerative colitis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34670875 PMCID: PMC9289828 DOI: 10.5009/gnl210262
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gut Liver ISSN: 1976-2283 Impact factor: 4.321
Therapeutic Outcomes by Biologic Trough Levels in Crohn’s Disease and Ulcerative Colitis
| Disease | Biologics | Week | Trough levels (μg/mL) | Therapeutic outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Crohn’s disease | Infliximab | 14 | ≥3.5 | Clinical response (week 54) |
| Infliximab | 2 | >23.1 | Endoscopic remission (week 12) | |
| 6 | >10.0 | Endoscopic remission (week 12) | ||
| Infliximab | 6 | >13.9 | Complete fistula response (week 14) | |
| 14 | >4.8 | Complete fistula response (week 14) | ||
| Infliximab | >5 | Mucosal healing | ||
| Infliximab | 14 | >7 | Clinical remission (week 54) | |
| Adalimumab | 14 | >12 | Clinical remission (week 54) | |
| Adalimumab | >4.9 | Mucosal healing | ||
| Adalimumab | >7.1 | Mucosal healing | ||
| Certolizumab pegol | 6 | >31.8 | Clinical response (week 6) | |
| 6 | >36.1 | Fecal calprotectin <250 mg/g and Crohn’s Disease Activity Index ≤150 (week 26) | ||
| 12 | >14.8 | Clinical response (week 26) | ||
| Vedolizumab | 6 | >33.3 | Clinical remission (week 6) | |
| Vedolizumab | 2 | >35.2 | Biomedical remission (week 6) | |
| Ustekinumab | 8 | >3.3 | Clinical remission (week 8) | |
| Ustekinumab | 8 | >7.2 | Biological remission (week 8) | |
| Ulcerative colitis | Infliximab | 14 | >5.1 | Clinical response (week 30) |
| Infliximab | 2 | ≥18.6 | Mayo endoscope subscore ≤ 1 (week 8) | |
| 6 | ≥10.6 | Mayo endoscope subscore ≤ 1 (week 8) | ||
| 8 | ≥34.9 | Mayo endoscope subscore ≤ 1 (week 8) | ||
| 14 | ≥5.1 | Mayo endoscope subscore ≤ 1 (week 30) | ||
| 14 | ≥6.7 | Mayo endoscope subscore = 0 (week 30) | ||
| 30 | ≥2.3 | Mayo endoscope subscore ≤ 1 (week 30) | ||
| 30 | ≥3.8 | Mayo endoscope subscore = 0 (week 30) | ||
| Adalimumab | >4.9 | Mucosal healing | ||
| Golimumab | 2 | >8.9 | Clinical response (week 6) | |
| 6 | >2.5 | Clinical response (week 6) | ||
| Vedolizumab | 6 | >37.5 | Clinical remission (week 6) | |
| Vedolizumab | 6 | >16.55 | Vedolizumab persistence (1 year) | |
| Vedozinumab | 2 | >28.9 | Clinical response (week 14) | |
| 6 | >20.8 | Clinical response (week 14) | ||
| 14 | >17.0 | Mucosal healing (week 14) | ||
| 14 | >12.6 | Clinical response (week 14) |
Trough Levels of Biologics Recommended by Current Clinical Practice Guidelines
| Drugs | Phase | Trough level (µg/mL) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Infliximab | Post-induction phase (week 14) | ≥7 | Papamichael |
| Maintenance phase | ≥3 | Papamichael | |
| Maintenance phase | ≥5 | Feuerstein | |
| Maintenance phase | ≥5 | Vande Casteele | |
| Induction phase (week 2) | ≥25 | van Rheenen | |
| Induction phase (week 6) | ≥15 | van Rheenen | |
| Post-induction phase (week 14) | ≥5 | van Rheenen | |
| Adalimumab | Induction phase (week 4) | ≥7 | Papamichael |
| Maintenance phase | ≥7.5 | Feuerstein | |
| Maintenance phase | ≥5 | Papamichael | |
| Maintenance phase | ≥7.5 | Vande Casteele | |
| Induction phase (week 4) | ≥7.5 | van Rheenen | |
| Maintenance phase (week 8) | ≥7.5 | van Rheenen | |
| Certolizumab pegol | Induction phase (week 6) | ≥32 | Papamichael |
| Maintenance phase | ≥15 | Papamichael | |
| Maintenance phase | ≥20 | Feuerstein | |
| Maintenance phase | ≥20 | Vande Casteele | |
| Golimumab | Induction phase (week 6) | ≥2.5 | Papamichael |
| Maintenance phase | ≥1 | Papamichael | |
| Vedolizumab | Induction phase (week 6) | >20 | Shukla |
| Maintenance phase (week 14 and beyond) | >12 | Shukla | |
| Ustekinumab | Induction phase (week 8) | >4 | Shukla |
| Maintenance phase (week 16 and beyond) | >2 | Shukla |
Proposed Mechanisms of Biologic Treatment Failure in Inflammatory Bowel Disease10,16
| Drug trough level | Anti-drug antibody | Phase of treatment | Cause of failure | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-immune mediated pharmacokinetic failure | Suboptimal | Undetectable | Primary non-responder at induction phase |
Excessive inflammatory burden Low serum albumin level |
| Secondary loss of response at maintenance phase |
Rapid drug clearance Excessive drug wastage | |||
| Anti-drug antibodies mediated pharmacokinetic failure | Suboptimal | Detectable | Secondary loss of response at maintenance phase | Neutralizing anti-drug antibodies |
| Mechanistic failure | Optimal | Undetectable | Primary non-responder at induction phase | Inflammatory mechanisms not blocked by the applied biologics |
Fig. 1Reactive and proactive therapeutic drug monitoring strategies for biologics during the treatment course of inflammatory bowel disease.
CRP, C-reactive protein; ESR, erythrocyte sedimentation rate.
Fig. 2Proposed treatment algorithms for proactive and reactive therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) in patients receiving biologics.
ADAb, anti-drug antibody.