Background Pediatric ulcerative colitis (UC) treatment has changed dramatically with the introduction of multiple biologics. The goal of this study was to determine the effectiveness of these new biologics on achieving remission, nutritional impact, and eventual need for surgery in children. Methods We retrospectively analyzed hospital records of UC patients (ages 1-19) seen at a pediatric gastroenterology clinic between January 2012 andAugust 2020. Patients were divided into groups: 1) medically without biologics or surgery; 2) patients treated with one biologic; and 3) patients treated with multiple biologics 4)patients that underwent colectomy. Results There were 115 UC patients with a mean follow-up of 5.9 ± 3.7 years (1 month-15.3 years). PUCAI score at diagnosis was mild in 52 patients (45%), moderate in 25 (21%), and severe in 5 (4.3%). PUCAI score for 33 patients (29%) could not be calculated. There were 48 (41.3%) in group 1 with 58% remission, 34 (29.6%) in group 2 with 71% remission, 24 (20.8%) in group 3 with 29% remission, and only 9 (7.8%) in group 4 with 100% remission. The majority (55%) of surgical patients had colectomy within the first year of diagnosis. BMI improved after surgery ( P = 0.001). The change from one biologic to others did not improve nutrition over time. Discussion New biologics are changing the landscape in maintaining remission from UC. The current need for surgery is much lower than previously published studies. In medically refractive UC, nutritional status only improved after surgery. Addition of another biologic for medically refractory ulcerative colitis in order to avoid surgery must take into account the positive impact surgery has on nutrition and disease remission.
Introduction: A precision-guided dosing tool that uses Bayesian data assimilation was developed to forecast Infliximab (IFX) exposure. Our objective was to establish the utility of the tool in clinical decision making during IFX maintenance therapy when used reactively, to address inadequate disease control that results from suboptimal exposure, and proactively, to sustain exposure commensurate with disease remission in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Methods: Blood specimens were collected, anytime beyond 20 days after a prior infusion in a prospective study (EMPOWER). Pharmacokinetic (PK) testing was conducted at Prometheus Laboratories (San Diego, CA). Serum IFX, antibodies to IFX (ATI) and albumin concentrations were all imputed with dosing regimen and weight in a Bayesian data assimilation tool to produce individualized PK profiles that forecasted IFX concentration and time to trough concentration below pre-specified thresholds (e.g., , 10 mg/mL). Forecasted exposure at various dosing regimens was also provided. Physician's global assessment of disease activity was collected with the decision to change IFX dosing that resulted from PK test results. Statistical analysis consisted of Mann-Whitney and Fisher Exact test as appropriate.
Background Tofacitinib, a Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitor, has recently been approved for treatment of moderate to severe active ulcerative colitis (UC) in adults. Data on efficacy and safety in pediatrics are limited. In this multicenter study from the Paediatric IBD Porto group of ESPGHAN, we describe the short-term effectiveness and safety of tofacitinib in an international pediatric IBD cohort. Methods Retrospective review of children (2-18 years) diagnosed with UC treated with tofacitinib from 15 pediatric centers internationally. Primary outcome was corticosteroid-free clinical remission (PUCAI<10) at week 8, with secondary outcomes including clinical response (≥20 point decrease in PUCAI), colectomy rate and safety. Primary outcome was calculated utilizing non-response imputation (NRI), whereby drug cessation for any reason was considered treatment failure. Results 78 patients (43 (55%) female, mean age at diagnosis 12.5 (±2.7) years, median disease duration 20 months (IQR 10.3-38.8)), all with previous biologic failure, including 20/78 (26%) with previous failure of three biologic classes. 15/78 (19%) patients achieved corticosteroid-free clinical remission at week 8 with a further 18/78 (23%) demonstrating clinical response. 9/78 (12%) underwent colectomy by week 8, and 21/78 (27%) by week 24. Twelve adverse events were reported including five infective (three of which deemed possibly related to treatment – zoster, HSV-2 cheilitis and septic arthritis), one case of pancreatitis, and abnormal blood test results in 5 children (anemia, lymphopenia, elevated hepatic transaminases and hypercholesterolemia). Conclusion In this largest real-life cohort of tofacitinib in pediatric UC to date, tofacitinib seemed effective in at least 19% of highly refractory patients by week 8. Adverse reactions and safety were largely consistent with adult data.
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