Comparative Safety and Effectiveness of Vedolizumab to Tumor Necrosis Factor Antagonist Therapy for Ulcerative Colitis. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • BACKGROUND & AIMS: We aimed to compare safety and effectiveness of vedolizumab to tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-antagonist therapy in ulcerative colitis in routine practice. METHODS: A multicenter, retrospective, observational cohort study (May 2014 to December 2017) of ulcerative colitis patients treated with vedolizumab or TNF-antagonist therapy. Propensity score weighted comparisons for development of serious adverse events and achievement of clinical remission, steroid-free clinical remission, and steroid-free deep remission. A priori determined subgroup comparisons in TNF-antagonist-naïve and -exposed patients, and for vedolizumab against infliximab and subcutaneous TNF-antagonists separately. RESULTS: A total of 722 (454 vedolizumab, 268 TNF antagonist) patients were included. Vedolizumab-treated patients were more likely to achieve clinical remission (hazard ratio [HR], 1.651; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.229-2.217), steroid-free clinical remission (HR, 1.828; 95% CI, 1.135-2.944), and steroid-free deep remission (HR, 2.819; 95% CI, 1.496-5.310) than those treated with TNF antagonists. Results were consistent across subgroup analyses in TNF-antagonist-naïve and -exposed patients, and for vedolizumab vs infliximab and vs subcutaneous TNF-antagonist agents separately. Overall, there were no statistically significant differences in the risk of serious adverse events (HR, 0.899; 95% CI, 0.502-1.612) or serious infections (HR, 1.235; 95% CI, 0.608-2.511) between vedolizumab-treated and TNF-antagonist-treated patients. However, in TNF-antagonist-naïve patients, vedolizumab was less likely to be associated with serious adverse events than TNF antagonists (HR, 0.192; 95% CI, 0.049-0.754). CONCLUSIONS: Treatment of ulcerative colitis with vedolizumab is associated with higher rates of remission than treatment with TNF-antagonist therapy in routine practice, and lower rates of serious adverse events in TNF-antagonist-naïve patients.

authors

  • Lukin, Dana Jeremy
  • Faleck, David
  • Xu, Ronghui
  • Zhang, Yiran
  • Weiss, Aaron
  • Aniwan, Satimai
  • Kadire, Siri
  • Tran, Gloria
  • Rahal, Mahmoud
  • Winters, Adam
  • Chablaney, Shreya
  • Koliani-Pace, Jenna L
  • Meserve, Joseph
  • Campbell, James P
  • Kochhar, Gursimran
  • Bohm, Matthew
  • Varma, Sashidhar
  • Fischer, Monika
  • Boland, Brigid
  • Singh, Siddharth
  • Hirten, Robert
  • Ungaro, Ryan
  • Lasch, Karen
  • Shmidt, Eugenia
  • Jairath, Vipul
  • Hudesman, David
  • Chang, Shannon
  • Swaminath, Arun
  • Shen, Bo
  • Kane, Sunanda
  • Loftus, Edward V
  • Sands, Bruce E
  • Colombel, Jean-Frederic
  • Siegel, Corey A
  • Sandborn, William J
  • Dulai, Parambir S

publication date

  • October 8, 2020

Research

keywords

  • Colitis, Ulcerative
  • Tumor Necrosis Factor Inhibitors

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC8026779

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85100470091

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1016/j.cgh.2020.10.003

PubMed ID

  • 33039584

Additional Document Info