| Literature DB >> 35310082 |
Quazim A Alayo1,2, Marc Fenster3, Osama Altayar4, Kerri L Glassner5, Ernesto Llano6, Kindra Clark-Snustad7, Anish Patel8, Lukasz Kwapisz9, Andres J Yarur10, Benjamin L Cohen11, Matthew A Ciorba2, Deborah Thomas12, Scott D Lee7, Edward V Loftus13, David I Fudman6, Bincy P Abraham5, Jean-Frederic Colombel14, Parakkal Deepak2.
Abstract
Background: Combining biologics and small molecules could potentially overcome the plateau of drug efficacy in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis to assess the safety and effectiveness of dual biologic therapy (DBT), or small molecule combined with a biologic therapy (SBT) in IBD patients.Entities:
Keywords: Crohn’s disease; biologics; inflammatory bowel diseases; meta-analysis; ulcerative colitis
Year: 2022 PMID: 35310082 PMCID: PMC8924906 DOI: 10.1093/crocol/otac002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crohns Colitis 360 ISSN: 2631-827X
Baseline information and patient characteristics.
| Study type | Country (single/multicenter) | IBD type, | No. of previous biologics, median (IQR/range) | No. of therapeutic trials, | Combinatorial treatments | Median duration of follow-up (weeks) | No. of therapeutic trials discontinued DT, | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sands et al[ | Randomized controlled trial | United States (multicenter) | CD (52) | 0 | 52 | NAT + aTNF | m 32 | 5/52 (9.6%) |
| Buer et al[ | Prospective cohort | Norway (multicenter) | CD (4) | NA (R 1–3) | 10 | VDZ + aTNF | 68 | 2/10 (20.0%) |
| Mao et al[ | Case series | United States (single) | CD (3) | 3 (IQR 2–5) | 3 | VDZ + aTNF | NA | 0/3 (0%) |
| Dolinger et al[ | Retrospective cohort | United States (single) | CD (7) | 3 (IQR 1–2.5) | 16 | VDZ + UST | 26 | 3/16 (18.8%) |
| Fumery et al[ | Case series | France (single) | CD (4) | 2 (IQR 0–4) | 5 | UST + aTNF | 24 | NA |
| Glassner et al[ | Retrospective cohort | United States (single) | CD (30) | 2 (IQR 1–2) | 52 | VDZ + aTNF | 16 | NA |
| Kwapisz et al[ | Retrospective cohort | United States (single) | CD (14) | 4 (R 1–7) | 15 | VDZ + aTNF | 24 | 1/15 (6.7%) |
| Olbjorn et al[ | Retrospective cohort | Norway (single) | CD (9) | 1 (R 1–2) | 13 | VDZ + aTNF | NA | 12/13 (92.3%) |
| Privitera et al[ | Retrospective cohort | Italy (multicenter) | CD (10) | 2.5 (IQR 2–3) | 13 | VDZ + aTNF | 28 | 4/13 (30.8%) |
| Yang et al[ | Retrospective cohort | United States/Canada (multicenter) | CD (22) | 4 (R 2–5) | 24 | VDZ + aTNF | 39 | 15/24 (62.5%) |
| Alayo et al[ | Retrospective cohort | United States (multicenter) | CD (10) | 2 (IQR 1–3) | 35 | Tofa + aTNF | 16 | 20/35 (57.1%) |
| Lee et al[ | Retrospective cohort | United States (single) | CD (19) | 4 (IQR 3–4) | 19 | Tofa + aTNF | 42.3 | 5/19 (26.3%) |
| Llano et al[ | Retrospective cohort | United States (single) | CD (3) | 2 (R 1–4) | 14 | VDZ + aTNF | 31 | 5/14 (35.7%) |
Abbreviations: APR, apremilast; aTNF, anti-tumor necrosis factor; CD, Crohn’s disease; DT, dual therapy; ETA, etanercept; IBD, inflammatory bowel disease; IBD-U, inflammatory bowel disease unclassified; IQR, interquartile range; m, mean; NA, not available; NAT, natalizumab; OCR, ocrelizumab; R, range; SKM, secukinumab; Tofa, tofacitinib; UC, ulcerative colitis; UST, ustekinumab; VDZ, vedolizumab. Patients who were on biologics/small molecule drugs not FDA approved for IBD were not included in this table.
Some patients underwent multiples therapeutic trials.
Study was done in pediatric population.
Study characteristics—baseline data and definition of outcomes.
| Male (%) | Age (in years) | Baseline CRP/FC | Indication for combination therapy | Clinical effectiveness definitions | Endoscopy effectiveness definitions | EIM assessment | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sands et al[ | 24 (46) | m 39.9 (±12·6) | CRP: m 6.5 mg/L (±11.1) | Active luminal disease | Response: 70-point decrease from baseline in the CDAI score | NR | NR |
| Buer et al[ | 5 (50) | CRP: 5.45 mg/dL (R 0.6 to 52.4) | Active luminal disease | Remission: | Response: CD, significant improvement but still with ulceration; UC, decrease in endoscopic Mayo >1 | NR | |
| Mao et al[ | 3 (75) | NR | CRP: 37.4 mg/L (27.2 to 41.0) | Active luminal disease; extraluminal disease | NR | NR | NR |
| Dolinger et al[ | 8 (50%) | M 15.9 | CRP: 5.7 mg/L (1.5 to 23) | Active luminal disease | Remission: CD: wPCDAI ≤12.5; UC/IBD-U: pMS <2 | NR | NR |
| Fumery et al[ | 4 (57.1) | M 49 | NR | Active luminal disease; extraluminal disease; paradoxical adverse event | NR | NR | NR |
| Glassner et al[ | 16 (32) | m 36.7 | CRP: 5 mg/dL (1.34 to 23.4) | Active luminal disease; extraluminal disease | Remission: HBI < 5, partial Mayo < 3 | Remission: SES-CD score 0–2, Rutgeerts score i0–i1, or Mayo score 0 | NR |
| Kwapisz et al[ | 5 (33.3) | M 36 | NR | Active luminal disease | Response: | NR | NR |
| Olbjorn et al[ | 6 (46) | M 16 | NR | Active luminal disease; extraluminal disease; paradoxical adverse event | NR | NR | Improvement in psoriasis |
| Privitera et al[ | 7 (44) | M 38 | NR | Active luminal disease; extraluminal disease | NR | NR | EIM clinical activity was classified as severe, mild, or remission according to clinical judgment |
| Yang et al[ | 10 (45) | M 35 | CRP: 17 mg/L (11.0 to 24.0) | Active luminal disease | Response: PRO-2 reduction by 8 | Response: >50% reduction in SES-CD or explicitly stated in endo report | NR |
| Alayo et al[ | 17 (49) | M 32 | CRP: 1.35 mg/dL (0.5 to 11.6) | Active luminal disease | Response: >50% reduction in symptoms assessed based on PGA | Response: CD: >50% reduction in SES-CD or ≥50% reduction in MaRIAs | NR |
| Lee et al[ | 9 (47) | M 40 | CRP: 3.7 mg/dL (1·7 to14·9) | Active luminal disease; extraluminal disease | Response: ≥3 point decrease in HBI | Response: ≥50% decrease in SES-CD | NR |
| Llano et al[ | 7 (50) | M 37 | CRP: 8 mg/L | Active luminal disease | Remission: normalization of HBI/Lichtiger | Response: improvement in endoscopic Mayo | NR |
Abbreviations: CD, Crohn’s disease; CDAI, Crohn’s Disease Activity Index; CRP, C-reactive protein; EIM, extraintestinal manifestations; FC, fecal calprotectin; HBI, Harvey–Bradshaw index; IQR, interquartile range; m, mean; MaRIA, Magnetic Resonance Index of Activity; NR, not reported; PGA, Physician Global Assessment; pMS, partial Mayo score; PRO, patient-reported outcome; R, range; SES-CD, Simple Endoscopic Score for Crohn Disease; UC, ulcerative colitis; wPCDAI, weighted Pediatric Crohn’s Disease Activity Index; ±, standard deviation.
Median (interquartile range) except otherwise specified.
Study was done in pediatric population.
Median or mean was not reported.
Figure 1.Forest plot of pooled adverse events rates for different combination therapies. Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; W, weights.
Figure 2.Forest plot of pooled serious adverse events rates for different combination therapies. Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; W, weights.
List of serious and other adverse events reported by the combination category.
| Combinations | Serious adverse events | Other adverse events |
|---|---|---|
| Vedolizumab + ustekinumab | Abscesses (abdominal wall, pelvic abscesses, perianal), PICC line infection, sepsis, malnutrition, arthralgia, rotavirus infection/high output ostomy, Acinetobacter bacteremia | |
| Vedolizumab + anti-TNF | Peristomal cellulitis, bacterial enteric infection, | Bacterial enteric infection, perianal abscess, pneumonia, drug-induced lupus, rash, sinopulmonary infection (4), influenza virus infection, hand–foot–mouth disease |
| Ustekinumab + anti-TNF | — | Perianal abscess, skin infection, otitis externa, tubo-ovarian abscess |
| Tofacitinib + ustekinumab | — | Urinary tract infection, sinopulmonary infection, headache, exacerbation of Crohn’s disease, urinary frequency, worsened GERD, rash (2) |
| Tofacitinib + vedolizumab | Septic arthritis, deep venous thrombosis, | |
| Tofacitinib + anti-TNF | ||
| Natalizumab + anti-TNF | — | Headache (12), fatigue (7), exacerbation of Crohn’s disease (5), dizziness (5), nausea (5), DNA or ANA antibody positive (7), dyspexia (4), abdominal pain (3), arthralgia (3), backpain (3), insomnia (3), pyrexia (3), sinopulmonary infections (8) |
Abbreviations: GERD, gastroesophageal reflux disease; LDL, low-density lipoprotein; PICC, peripherally inserted central catheter; TNF, tumor necrosis factor.
Figure 3.Forest plot of pooled clinical remission rates for different combination therapies. Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; W, weights.