نبذة مختصرة : BACKGROUND: Anti-TNF drugs are effective treatments for the management of Crohn's disease but treatment failure is common. We aimed to identify clinical and pharmacokinetic factors that predict primary non-response at week 14 after starting treatment, non-remission at week 54, and adverse events leading to drug withdrawal. METHODS: The personalised anti-TNF therapy in Crohn's disease study (PANTS) is a prospective observational UK-wide study. We enrolled anti-TNF-naive patients (aged ≥6 years) with active luminal Crohn's disease at the time of first exposure to infliximab or adalimumab between March 7, 2013, and July 15, 2016. Patients were evaluated for 12 months or until drug withdrawal. Demographic data, smoking status, age at diagnosis, disease duration, location, and behaviour, previous medical and drug history, and previous Crohn's disease-related surgeries were recorded at baseline. At every visit, disease activity score, weight, therapy, and adverse events were recorded; drug and total anti-drug antibody concentrations were also measured. Treatment failure endpoints were primary non-response at week 14, non-remission at week 54, and adverse events leading to drug withdrawal. We used regression analyses to identify which factors were associated with treatment failure. FINDINGS: We enrolled 955 patients treated with infliximab (753 with originator; 202 with biosimilar) and 655 treated with adalimumab. Primary non-response occurred in 295 (23·8%, 95% CI 21·4-26·2) of 1241 patients who were assessable at week 14. Non-remission at week 54 occurred in 764 (63·1%, 60·3-65·8) of 1211 patients who were assessable, and adverse events curtailed treatment in 126 (7·8%, 6·6-9·2) of 1610 patients. In multivariable analysis, the only factor independently associated with primary non-response was low drug concentration at week 14 (infliximab: odds ratio 0·35 [95% CI 0·20-0·62], p=0·00038; adalimumab: 0·13 [0·06-0·28], p<0·0001); the optimal week 14 drug concentrations associated with remission at both week 14 and week ...
Relation: https://openaccess.sgul.ac.uk/id/eprint/111622/1/PANTS%20LGH%20R3%20changes%20accepted.docx; Kennedy, NA; Heap, GA; Green, HD; Hamilton, B; Bewshea, C; Walker, GJ; Thomas, A; Nice, R; Perry, MH; Bouri, S; et al. Kennedy, NA; Heap, GA; Green, HD; Hamilton, B; Bewshea, C; Walker, GJ; Thomas, A; Nice, R; Perry, MH; Bouri, S; Chanchlani, N; Heerasing, NM; Hendy, P; Lin, S; Gaya, DR; Cummings, JRF; Selinger, CP; Lees, CW; Hart, AL; Parkes, M; Sebastian, S; Mansfield, JC; Irving, PM; Lindsay, J; Russell, RK; McDonald, TJ; McGovern, D; Goodhand, JR; Ahmad, T; UK Inflammatory Bowel Disease Pharmacogenetics Study Group (2019) Predictors of anti-TNF treatment failure in anti-TNF-naive patients with active luminal Crohn's disease: a prospective, multicentre, cohort study. Lancet Gastroenterol Hepatol, 4 (5). pp. 341-353. ISSN 2468-1253 https://doi.org/10.1016/S2468-1253(19)30012-3 SGUL Authors: Pollok, Richard Charles G
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