Impact of Concomitant 5-Aminosalicylic Acid Therapy on Vedolizumab Efficacy and Safety in Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Post Hoc Analyses of Clinical Trial Data

Author:

Ungaro Ryan C1ORCID,Kadali Harisha2,Zhang Wenwen3,Adsul Shashi4,Reinisch Walter5

Affiliation:

1. The Henry D. Janowitz Division of Gastroenterology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai , New York, NY , USA

2. Takeda, Global Patient Safety and Evaluation , Cambridge, MA , USA

3. Takeda, Statistical and Quantitative Sciences , Cambridge, MA , USA

4. Takeda, Global Medical Affairs , Cambridge, MA , USA

5. Medical University of Vienna, Department of Internal Medicine III , Vienna , Austria

Abstract

Abstract Background and Aims The benefit of continuing 5-aminosalicylic acid [5-ASA] treatment when escalating to advanced therapies in patients with inflammatory bowel disease [IBD] is unclear. Vedolizumab is a gut-selective monoclonal anti-α4β7-integrin antibody used to treat moderate to severe IBD. Clinical trial data were analysed post hoc to assess the impact of 5-ASA co-treatment on vedolizumab efficacy and safety in patients with IBD. Methods Data were analysed from patients aged 18–80 years with moderate to severe ulcerative colitis [UC]/Crohn’s disease [CD] receiving intravenous [IV]/subcutaneous [SC] vedolizumab. Efficacy data were from four studies [GEMINI 1 and 2 and VISIBLE 1 and 2]; safety data were from seven studies [GEMINI 1‒3 and long-term, VISIBLE 1, 2, and open-label extension]. The impact of 5-ASA co-treatment on clinical and endoscopic outcomes at Weeks 6 and 52 was assessed using multivariate analysis (adjusted odds ratios [aORs] with 95% confidence intervals [CIs]). Results There were no significant differences in UC clinical remission [Mayo score ≤2, no subscore >1] rates with vs without 5-ASA at Week 6 [20.7% vs 20.4%, respectively; aOR 0.77, 95% CI 0.43–1.38] or at Week 52 [45.1% vs 40.6%; aOR 1.14, 0.70–1.86], and in CD clinical remission [CD activity index score ≤150] rates at Week 6 [41.4% vs 35.1%; 1.26, 0.86–1.85] or at Week 52 [49.6% vs 37.8%; 1.35, 0.91–1.99]. The incidence of enteric and all infections in vedolizumab IV/SC-treated patients was low with and without 5-ASA. Conclusion Continuation of concomitant oral 5-ASA after starting vedolizumab had no significant impact on clinical and endoscopic outcomes. Clinical trial identifiers GEMINI 1: NCT00783718, EudraCT 2008-002782-32; GEMINI 2: NCT00783692, EudraCT 2008-00278-33; GEMINI 3: NCT01224171, EudraCT 2009-016488-12; GEMINI long-term safety study: NCT00790933, EudraCT 2008-002784-14; VISIBLE 1: NCT02611830, EudraCT 2015-000480-14; VISIBLE 2: NCT02611817, EudraCT 2015-000481-58; VISIBLE open-label extension: NCT02620046, EudraCT 2015-000482-31.

Funder

NIH Career Development

Excel Medical Affairs

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Gastroenterology,General Medicine

Reference43 articles.

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