类固醇难治性急性重度溃疡性结肠炎的强化与标准剂量英夫利西单抗诱导疗法(PREDICT-UC):一项开放标签、多中心、随机对照试验。

IF 30.9 1区 医学 Q1 GASTROENTEROLOGY & HEPATOLOGY Lancet Gastroenterology & Hepatology Pub Date : 2024-11-01 Epub Date: 2024-09-02 DOI:10.1016/S2468-1253(24)00200-0
Matthew C Choy, Christopher F D Li Wai Suen, Danny Con, Kristy Boyd, Raquel Pena, Kathryn Burrell, Ourania Rosella, David Proud, Richard Brouwer, Alexandra Gorelik, Danny Liew, William R Connell, Emily K Wright, Kirstin M Taylor, Aviv Pudipeddi, Michelle Sawers, Britt Christensen, Watson Ng, Jakob Begun, Graham Radford-Smith, Mayur Garg, Neal Martin, Daniel R van Langenberg, Nik S Ding, Lauren Beswick, Rupert W Leong, Miles P Sparrow, Peter De Cruz
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We compared intensified and standard dose infliximab rescue strategies and explored maintenance therapies following infliximab induction in ASUC.</p><p><strong>Methods: </strong>In this open-label, multicentre, randomised controlled trial, patients aged 18 years or older from 13 Australian tertiary hospitals with intravenous steroid-refractory ASUC were randomly assigned (1:2) to receive a first dose of 10 mg/kg infliximab or 5 mg/kg infliximab (randomisation 1). Block randomisation was used and stratified by history of thiopurine exposure and study site, with allocation concealment maintained via computer-generated randomisation. Patients in the 10 mg/kg group (intensified induction strategy [IIS]) received a second dose at day 7 or earlier at the time of non-response; all patients in the 5 mg/kg group were re-randomised between day 3 and day 7 (1:1; randomisation 2) to a standard induction strategy (SIS) or accelerated induction strategy (AIS), resulting in three induction groups. Patients in the SIS group received 5 mg/kg infliximab at weeks 0, 2, and 6, with an extra 5 mg/kg dose between day 3 and day 7 if no response. Patients in the AIS group received 5 mg/kg infliximab at weeks 0, 1, and 3, with the week 1 dose increased to 10 mg/kg and given between day 3 and day 7 if no response. The primary outcome was clinical response by day 7 (reduction in Lichtiger score to <10 with a decrease of ≥3 points from baseline, improvement in rectal bleeding, and decreased stool frequency to ≤4 per day). Secondary endpoints assessed outcomes to day 7 and exploratory outcomes compared induction regimens until month 3. From month 3, maintenance therapy was selected based on treatment experience, with use of thiopurine monotherapy, combination infliximab and thiopurine, or infliximab monotherapy, with follow-up as a cohort study up to month 12. Analysis was by intention to treat. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02770040, and is completed.</p><p><strong>Findings: </strong>Between July 20, 2016, and Sept 24, 2021, 138 patients were randomly assigned (63 [46%] female and 75 [54%] male); 46 received a first dose of 10 mg/kg infliximab and 92 received 5 mg/kg infliximab. After randomisation 1, we observed no significant difference in the proportion of patients who had a clinical response by day 7 between the 10 mg/kg and 5 mg/kg groups (30 [65%] of 46 vs 56 [61%] of 92, p=0·62; risk ratio adjusted for thiopurine treatment history, 1·06 [95% CI 0·94-1·20], p=0·32). We found no significant differences in secondary endpoints including time to clinical response or change in Lichtiger score from baseline to day 7. Two patients who received 10 mg/kg infliximab underwent colectomy in the first 7 days compared with no patients in the 5 mg/kg group (p=0·21). Three serious adverse events occurred in three patients in both the 10 mg/kg group and 5 mg/kg group. After randomisation 2, the proportions of patients with clinical response at day 14 (34 [74%] of 46 in the IIS group, 35 [73%] of 48 in the AIS group, and 30 [68%] of 44 in the SIS group, p=0·81), clinical remission at month 3 (23 [50%], 25 [52%], 21 [48%], p=0·92), steroid-free remission at month 3 (19 [41%], 20 [42%], 18 [41%], p=1·0), endoscopic remission at month 3 (21 [46%], 22 [46%], 21 [48%], p=0·98), and colectomy at month 3 (three [7%] of 45, nine [19%] of 47, five [12%] of 43, p=0·20) were not significantly different between groups. Between day 8 and month 3, the proportion of patients with at least one infectious adverse event possibly related to infliximab was two (4%) of 46 in the IIS group, eight (17%) of 48 in the AIS group, and eight (18%) of 44 in the SIS group (p=0·082). 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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:英夫利西单抗治疗类固醇难治性急性重度溃疡性结肠炎(ASUC)的最佳剂量策略尚不清楚。我们比较了加强剂量和标准剂量英夫利西单抗救治策略,并探讨了英夫利西单抗诱导治疗急性重症溃疡性结肠炎后的维持疗法:在这项开放标签、多中心、随机对照试验中,来自澳大利亚13家三级医院的18岁或18岁以上静脉注射类固醇难治性ASUC患者被随机分配(1:2)接受首剂10 mg/kg 英夫利西单抗或5 mg/kg 英夫利西单抗(随机化1)。采用整群随机分配法,并根据硫嘌呤暴露史和研究地点进行分层,通过计算机生成的随机码进行分配隐藏。10毫克/千克组(强化诱导策略[IIS])的患者在第7天或无应答时接受第二次给药;5毫克/千克组的所有患者在第3天和第7天之间(1:1;随机化2)被重新随机分配到标准诱导策略(SIS)或加速诱导策略(AIS),从而产生了三个诱导组。SIS组患者在第0周、第2周和第6周接受5毫克/千克英夫利西单抗治疗,如果没有反应,可在第3天和第7天之间额外服用5毫克/千克英夫利西单抗。AIS组患者在第0、1和3周接受5毫克/千克英夫利昔单抗治疗,如果没有反应,第1周的剂量将增加到10毫克/千克,并在第3天和第7天之间给药。主要结果是第7天时的临床反应(Lichtiger评分下降至结果:2016年7月20日至2021年9月24日期间,138名患者被随机分配(其中女性63人[46%],男性75人[54%]);46人首次接受10毫克/千克英夫利昔单抗,92人接受5毫克/千克英夫利昔单抗。随机分配1后,我们观察到10毫克/千克组和5毫克/千克组在第7天出现临床反应的患者比例无显著差异(46人中的30人[65%] vs 92人中的56人[61%],P=0-62;根据硫嘌呤治疗史调整后的风险比为1-06 [95% CI 0-94-1-20],P=0-32)。我们在次要终点(包括临床反应时间或从基线到第 7 天的 Lichtiger 评分变化)上未发现明显差异。有两名接受10毫克/千克英夫利西单抗治疗的患者在前7天接受了结肠切除术,而5毫克/千克组没有患者接受结肠切除术(P=0-21)。10毫克/千克组和5毫克/千克组均有3名患者发生了3次严重不良事件。随机分组 2 后,第 14 天有临床反应的患者比例(IIS 组 46 人中有 34 人[74%],AIS 组 48 人中有 35 人[73%],SIS 组 44 人中有 30 人[68%],P=0-81),第 3 个月有临床缓解的患者比例(23 人[50%],25 人[52%],21 人[48%],P=0-92)、第 3 个月时的无类固醇缓解率(19 [41%]、20 [42%]、18 [41%],P=1-0)、第 3 个月时的内镜缓解率(21 [46%]、22 [46%]、21 [48%],P=0-98)和第 3 个月时的结肠切除术(45 例中有 3 [7%]、47 例中有 9 [19%]、43 例中有 5 [12%],P=0-20)在组间无显著差异。从第8天到第3个月,至少发生一次可能与英夫利昔单抗有关的感染性不良事件的患者比例为:IIS组46人中2人(4%),AIS组48人中8人(17%),SIS组44人中8人(18%)(P=0-082)。研究中无死亡病例:英夫利西单抗是一种安全有效的ASUC抢救疗法。在类固醇难治性ASUC中,首剂10毫克/千克英夫利昔单抗在第7天获得临床应答方面并不优于5毫克/千克英夫利昔单抗。强化、加速和标准诱导方案在第14天时的临床反应、第3个月时的缓解率或结肠切除率方面没有显著差异:澳大利亚国家健康与医学研究委员会、澳大利亚胃肠病学会、Gandel Philanthropy、澳大利亚研究生奖、Janssen-Cilag。
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Intensified versus standard dose infliximab induction therapy for steroid-refractory acute severe ulcerative colitis (PREDICT-UC): an open-label, multicentre, randomised controlled trial.

Background: The optimal dosing strategy for infliximab in steroid-refractory acute severe ulcerative colitis (ASUC) is unknown. We compared intensified and standard dose infliximab rescue strategies and explored maintenance therapies following infliximab induction in ASUC.

Methods: In this open-label, multicentre, randomised controlled trial, patients aged 18 years or older from 13 Australian tertiary hospitals with intravenous steroid-refractory ASUC were randomly assigned (1:2) to receive a first dose of 10 mg/kg infliximab or 5 mg/kg infliximab (randomisation 1). Block randomisation was used and stratified by history of thiopurine exposure and study site, with allocation concealment maintained via computer-generated randomisation. Patients in the 10 mg/kg group (intensified induction strategy [IIS]) received a second dose at day 7 or earlier at the time of non-response; all patients in the 5 mg/kg group were re-randomised between day 3 and day 7 (1:1; randomisation 2) to a standard induction strategy (SIS) or accelerated induction strategy (AIS), resulting in three induction groups. Patients in the SIS group received 5 mg/kg infliximab at weeks 0, 2, and 6, with an extra 5 mg/kg dose between day 3 and day 7 if no response. Patients in the AIS group received 5 mg/kg infliximab at weeks 0, 1, and 3, with the week 1 dose increased to 10 mg/kg and given between day 3 and day 7 if no response. The primary outcome was clinical response by day 7 (reduction in Lichtiger score to <10 with a decrease of ≥3 points from baseline, improvement in rectal bleeding, and decreased stool frequency to ≤4 per day). Secondary endpoints assessed outcomes to day 7 and exploratory outcomes compared induction regimens until month 3. From month 3, maintenance therapy was selected based on treatment experience, with use of thiopurine monotherapy, combination infliximab and thiopurine, or infliximab monotherapy, with follow-up as a cohort study up to month 12. Analysis was by intention to treat. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02770040, and is completed.

Findings: Between July 20, 2016, and Sept 24, 2021, 138 patients were randomly assigned (63 [46%] female and 75 [54%] male); 46 received a first dose of 10 mg/kg infliximab and 92 received 5 mg/kg infliximab. After randomisation 1, we observed no significant difference in the proportion of patients who had a clinical response by day 7 between the 10 mg/kg and 5 mg/kg groups (30 [65%] of 46 vs 56 [61%] of 92, p=0·62; risk ratio adjusted for thiopurine treatment history, 1·06 [95% CI 0·94-1·20], p=0·32). We found no significant differences in secondary endpoints including time to clinical response or change in Lichtiger score from baseline to day 7. Two patients who received 10 mg/kg infliximab underwent colectomy in the first 7 days compared with no patients in the 5 mg/kg group (p=0·21). Three serious adverse events occurred in three patients in both the 10 mg/kg group and 5 mg/kg group. After randomisation 2, the proportions of patients with clinical response at day 14 (34 [74%] of 46 in the IIS group, 35 [73%] of 48 in the AIS group, and 30 [68%] of 44 in the SIS group, p=0·81), clinical remission at month 3 (23 [50%], 25 [52%], 21 [48%], p=0·92), steroid-free remission at month 3 (19 [41%], 20 [42%], 18 [41%], p=1·0), endoscopic remission at month 3 (21 [46%], 22 [46%], 21 [48%], p=0·98), and colectomy at month 3 (three [7%] of 45, nine [19%] of 47, five [12%] of 43, p=0·20) were not significantly different between groups. Between day 8 and month 3, the proportion of patients with at least one infectious adverse event possibly related to infliximab was two (4%) of 46 in the IIS group, eight (17%) of 48 in the AIS group, and eight (18%) of 44 in the SIS group (p=0·082). No deaths occurred in the study.

Interpretation: Infliximab is a safe and effective rescue therapy in ASUC. In steroid-refractory ASUC, a first dose of 10 mg/kg infliximab was not superior to 5 mg/kg infliximab in achieving clinical response by day 7. Intensified, accelerated, and standard induction regimens did not result in a significant difference in clinical response by day 14 or in remission or colectomy rates by month 3.

Funding: Australian National Health and Medical Research Council, Gastroenterology Society of Australia, Gandel Philanthropy, Australian Postgraduate Award, Janssen-Cilag.

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期刊介绍: The Lancet Gastroenterology & Hepatology is an authoritative forum for key opinion leaders across medicine, government, and health systems to influence clinical practice, explore global policy, and inform constructive, positive change worldwide. The Lancet Gastroenterology & Hepatology publishes papers that reflect the rich variety of ongoing clinical research in these fields, especially in the areas of inflammatory bowel diseases, NAFLD and NASH, functional gastrointestinal disorders, digestive cancers, and viral hepatitis.
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