| Literature DB >> 34729677 |
Elsa L S A van Liere1,2, Ahmed B Bayoumy3, Chris J J Mulder4, Ben Warner5, Bu Hayee6, Bilal A Mateen6, Jonathan D Nolan7, Nanne K H de Boer4, Simon H C Anderson5, Azhar R Ansari7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Beneficial response to first-line immunosuppressive azathioprine in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is low due to high rates of adverse events. Co-administrating allopurinol has been shown to improve tolerability. However, data on this co-therapy as first-line treatment are scarce. AIM: Retrospective comparison of long-term effectiveness and safety of first-line low-dose azathioprine-allopurinol co-therapy (LDAA) with first-line azathioprine monotherapy (AZAm) in patients with IBD without metabolite monitoring.Entities:
Keywords: Allopurinol; Azathioprine; Drug repositioning; Inflammatory bowel disease; Thiopurines
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34729677 PMCID: PMC9287424 DOI: 10.1007/s10620-021-07273-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dig Dis Sci ISSN: 0163-2116 Impact factor: 3.487
Fig. 1Flowchart showing the selection of the study population
Patient and disease characteristics, n (%) or median (IQR)
| LDAA patients ( | AZAm patients ( | |
|---|---|---|
| 95 (57%) | 65 (55%) | |
| Yes | 20 (12%) | 17 (14%) |
| No | 65 (39%) | 50 (42%) |
| Unknown | 81 (49%) | 51 (43%) |
| 41 (29–55) | 35 (27–51) | |
| 1 (1–6) | 1 (0–3) | |
| 93 (56%) | 63 (53%) | |
| < 17 | 3 (3%) | 2 (3%) |
| 17–40 | 53 (57%) | 42 (67%) |
| > 40 | 34 (37%) | 15 (23%) |
| Unknown | 3 (3%) | 4 (6%) |
| Inflammatory | 47 (50%) | 39 (62%) |
| Stricturing | 26 (28%) | 20 (32%) |
| Penetrating | 10 (11%) | 2 (3%) |
| Unknown | 10 (11%) | 2 (3%) |
| Perianal disease | 12 (13%) | 8 (13%) |
| Ileal | 33 (35%) | 30 (48%) |
| Colonic | 26 (28%) | 18 (29%) |
| Ileocolonic | 29 (31%) | 14 (22%) |
| Unknown | 5 (5%) | 1 (2%) |
| 72 (43%) | 52 (44%) | |
| Proctitis | 9 (13%) | 4 (8%) |
| Left-sided | 30 (42%) | 25 (48%) |
| Pancolitis | 27 (38%) | 19 (37%) |
| Unknown | 6 (8%) | 4 (8%) |
| 1 (1%) | 3 (3%) | |
| 15 (9%) | 10 (9%) | |
| None | 40 (24%) | 24 (21%) |
| Aminosalicylates | 119 (72%) | 93 (79%) |
| Methotrexate | 2 (1%) | 0 |
| Calcineurin inhibitor | 9 (5%) | 4 (3%) |
| Anti-tumour necrosis factor | 5 (3%) | 1 (1%) |
| Wild type rangea | 137 (87%) | 100 (90%) |
| Heterozygous rangeb | 21 (13%) | 11 (9%) |
| Unknown | 8 (5%) | 7 (6%) |
| Active diseasec | 149 (90%) | 109 (92%) |
| Intolerance to prior therapy | 3 (2%) | 3 (3%) |
| Optimisation of biologics | 2 (1%) | 1 (1%) |
| High risk profilec | 4 (2%) | 1 (1%) |
| Unknown | 8 (5%) | 4 (3%) |
| SCCAI | 6 (3–7) | 5 (3–6) |
| HBI | 5 (3–8) | 7 (5–10) |
| Entire cohort | 0.52 (0.43–0.58) | 1.75 (1.17–2.11) |
| TPMT wild typea patients | 0.54 (0.47–0.59) | 1.83 (1.54–2.18) |
| TPMT heterozygousb patients | 0.35 (0.30–0.43) | 0.93 (0.80–1.14) |
| None | 41 (25%) | 34 (29%) |
| Aminosalicylates | 83 (50%) | 61 (52%) |
| Calcineurin inhibitor | 7 (4%) | 2 (2%) |
| Anti-tumour necrosis factor | 14 (8%) | 3 (3%) |
| Steroids ≥ 10 mg/day | 53 (32%) | 44 (37%) |
| 25 (13–43) | 27 (14–42) | |
LDAA low-dose azathioprine with allopurinol, AZAm azathioprine monotherapy, IBD inflammatory bowel disease, SCCAI Simple Clinical Colitis Activity Index, HBI Harvey-Bradshaw Index, TPMT thiopurine s-methyltransferase
a68–150 mU/L
b20–67 mU/L
cIn accordance with international IBD guidelines[10]
dDisease activity scores (SCCAI for ulcerative colitis or HBI for Crohn’s disease) at initiation were documented in the patients’ medical records in 85/166 (51%) LDAA and 63/118 (53%) AZAm patients
Fig. 2Clinical benefit (CB) in patients receiving low-dose azathioprine with allopurinol (LDAA)
Fig. 3Clinical benefit (CB) in patients receiving azathioprine monotherapy (AZAm)
Primary outcome: clinical benefit, n (%)
| LDAA patients | AZAm patients | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Clinical benefit at 6 months | 116/156 (74%) | 59/111 (53%) | 0.0003 |
| Clinical benefit at 12 months | 74/138 (54%) | 38/103 (37%) | 0.01 |
| Clinical benefit in the long-term (≥ 12 months) | 51/138 (37%) | 25/103 (24%) | 0.04 |
Fig. 4Kaplan Meier survival curve of clinical benefit (CB) in patients treated with azathioprine monotherapy (AZAm) and low-dose azathioprine with allopurinol (LDAA). A statistical difference between the curves was found (p = 0.003)
Secondary outcomes, n (%)
| LDAA patients | AZAm patients | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Steroid withdrawal within 6 months | 44/47 (94%) | 27/31 (87%) | 0.33 |
| Calcineurin inhibitor withdrawal | 4/6 (67%) | 0/2 (0%) | 0.10 |
| Anti-tumour necrosis factor withdrawala | 4/13 (31%) | 0/3 (0%) | 0.27 |
| SCCAI ≤ 2 at last review | 37/53 (70%) | 24/38 (63%) | 0.51 |
| HBI ≤ 4 at last review | 32/53 (60%) | 21/40 (53%) | 0.45 |
| CRP entire treatment duration: | |||
| ≤ 10 mg/L | 93/158 (59%) | 59/94 (63%) | 0.54 |
| ≤ 5 mg/L | 65/158 (41%) | 40/94 (43%) | 0.83 |
LDAA low-dose azathioprine with allopurinol, AZAm azathioprine monotherapy, SCCAI Simple Clinical Colitis Activity Index, HBI Harvey-Bradshaw Index, CRP C-reactive protein
Disease activity scores (SCCAI for ulcerative colitis or HBI for Crohn’s disease) were documented in the patients’ medical records during follow-up in 106/166 (64%) LDAA and 78/118 (66%) AZAm patients; CRP values were available in 158 (95%) and 94 (80%) patients, respectively
Eight LDAA patients and 13 AZAm patients could not be assessed for rate of steroid, calcineurin inhibitor or anti-tumour necrosis factor withdrawal, due to insufficient documentation or cessation of thiopurine therapy within 6 months (only applicable for steroid withdrawal)
aBiologic therapy could be tapered off in 2/3 LDAA patients (but not in the single AZAm patient) using biologics prior to thiopurine initiation. Of the patients who commenced thiopurine and biologic therapy simultaneously because of a top-down therapeutic approach, 2/10 LDAA and 0/2 AZAm patients could discontinue biologic during follow-up
Adverse events, n (% of entire cohort)
| LDAA patients ( | AZAm patients ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 43 (26%) | 53 (45%) | 0.001 | |
| Hepatotoxicity | 2 (1%) | 3 (3%) | 0.40 |
| Elevated LFTs without hepatotoxicity | 1 (0.6%) | 2 (2%) | 0.37 |
| Myelotoxicity | 3 (2%) | 5 (4%) | 0.22 |
| Leukopenia | 2 (1%) | 3 (3%) | – |
| Thrombocytopenia | 1 (0.6%) | 1 (0.8%) | – |
| Leukopenia and thrombocytopenia | 0 | 1 (0.8%) | – |
| Gastro-intestinal complaints | 22 (13%) | 22 (19%) | 0.22 |
| Fatigue | 8 (5%) | 6 (5%) | 0.92 |
| Dizziness | 6 (4%) | 5 (4%) | 0.79 |
| Arthralgia | 5 (3%) | 3 (3%) | 0.81 |
| Alopecia | 3 (2%) | 0 | 0.14 |
| Pancreatitis | 3 (2%) | 4 (3%) | 0.40 |
| Malaise | 2 (1%) | 4 (3%) | 0.21 |
| Headache | 2 (1%) | 6 (5%) | 0.05 |
| Rash | 0 | 4 (3%) | 0.02 |
| Serious infection | 1 (0.6%) | 1 (0.8%) | 0.81 |
| Malignancy | 0 | 0 | – |
| Unknown | 2 (1%) | 2 (2%) | – |
| Other | 5 (3%) | 11 (9%) | – |
| 80 (48%) | 68 (58%) | 0.12 | |
| Hepatotoxicity | 11 (7%) | 8 (7%) | 0.96 |
| Elevated LFTs without hepatotoxicity | 13 (8%) | 10 (8%) | 0.84 |
| Myelotoxicity | 18 (11%) | 11 (9%) | 0.17 |
| Leukopenia | 9 (5%) | 7 (6%) | – |
| Thrombocytopenia | 6 (4%) | 1 (0.9%) | – |
| Leukopenia and thrombocytopenia | 3 (2%) | 3 (3%) | – |
| Gastro-intestinal complaints | 24 (15%) | 24 (20%) | 0.19 |
| Fatigue | 12 (7%) | 7 (6%) | 0.67 |
| Dizziness | 6 (4%) | 6 (5%) | 0.54 |
| Arthralgia | 5 (3%) | 4 (3%) | 0.86 |
| Alopecia | 3 (2%) | 0 | 0.14 |
| Pancreatitis | 3 (2%) | 4 (3%) | 0.40 |
| Malaise | 3 (2%) | 5 (4%) | 0.22 |
| Headache | 5 (3%) | 6 (5%) | 0.37 |
| Rash | 0 | 4 (3%) | 0.02 |
| Serious infection | 1 (0.6%)a | 1 (0.9%)b | 0.81 |
| Malignancy | 0 | 0 | – |
| Unknown | 3 (2%) | 2 (2%) | – |
| Other | 7 (4%) | 12 (10%) | – |
LDAA low-dose azathioprine with allopurinol, AZAm azathioprine monotherapy, LFTs liver function tests
aRespiratory tract infection
bCMV reactivation