How to Choose the Biologic Therapy in a Bio-naïve Patient with Inflammatory Bowel Disease
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Comparison of Biological Drugs for IBD in Bio-naïve Patients According to Indication
2.1. In Crohn´s Disease
2.1.1. Efficacy in Luminal CD
2.1.2. Efficacy in Fistulizing CD
2.1.3. Safety
Serious Infections
Malignancies
2.2. In Ulcerative Colitis
2.2.1. Efficacy in Moderate–Severe UC
- Head-to-head comparisons of biologic drugs
- Network meta-analysis comparing biologic drugs
- Comparison of biologic drugs in the real-world setting
2.2.2. Efficacy in Acute Severe UC
3. Predictors of Biologic Therapy Response
3.1. Genetic Predictors of Response
3.2. Patient Characteristics
3.3. Inflammatory Markers (Albumin, C-Reactive Protein (CRP), Calprotectin)
4. Other Aspects to Consider before Choosing a Biologic
4.1. Age and Response
4.2. Comorbidities
4.3. Presence of Extraintestinal Manifestations
4.3.1. Arthropathy
4.3.2. Ocular Manifestations
4.3.3. Skin Manifestations
4.4. Patient Preferences
4.5. Speed of Onset
4.6. Costs and Availability
4.6.1. Cost-Effectiveness Studies of Biologic Therapy
4.6.2. Biosimilars
5. Positioning Biologic Therapies in the Management of IBD
5.1. In Crohn’s Disease
5.2. In Ulcerative Colitis
6. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Authors (Year) | Biological Drugs | Patients | Sample Size | Follow-Up | Main Results | Conclusion |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kestens et al. (2013) [7] | IFX versus ADA | Anti-TNF naïve | 200 patients (100 IFX, 100 ADA) | 1 and 2 years | Steroid-free clinical response: IFX (at 1 and 2 years): 65% and 49% ADA (at 1 and 2 years): 62% and 41% | No difference between IFX and ADA |
Narula et al. (2016) [8] | IFX versus ADA | Anti-TNF naïve | 362 patients (251 IFX, 111 ADA) | 1 year | Steroid-free remission at 12 months: IFX: 44.3% ADA: 53.7% | No difference between IFX and ADA |
Cosnes et al. (2016) [9] | IFX versus ADA | Anti-TNF naïve | 906 patients 1284 therapeutic exposures to ADA (n = 521) or IFX (n = 763) | 2 years | Response rate at 6 months and at 2 years: IFX mono: 72% and 45% IFX combo with immunomodulator: 84% and 68% ADA mono: 64% and 44% ADA combo with immunomodulator: 86% and 70% | No difference between IFX and ADA Combination therapy superior to monotherapy |
Macaluso et al. (2019) [10] | IFX versus ADA | Anti-TNF naïve and experienced | 632 patients 735 total treatments | 1 year | Clinical benefit (steroid-free remission or clinical response) in naïve patients at 12 weeks and 1 year: IFX: 77.6% and 64.5% ADA: 81.8% and 69.2% | No difference between IFX and ADA Lower response rates among anti-TNF experienced compared to naïve |
Osterman et al. (2014) [11] | IFX versus ADA | Anti-TNF naïve | 2330 patients (1459 IFX, 871 ADA) | 26 weeks | Persistence on therapy: IFX 49%, ADA 47% | No difference between IFX and ADA |
Singh et al. (2018) [12] | IFX versus ADA | Anti-TNF naïve | 827 patients (512 IFX, 315 ADA) | 2 years | CD-related hospitalization: HR 0.81 (95% CI 0.55–1.20) Major abdominal surgery: HR 1.24 (0.66–2.33) Serious infections: HR 1.06 (0.26–4.21) | No difference between IFX and ADA in efficacy and safety |
Macaluso et al. (2021) [13] | VDZ versus ADA | Anti-TNF naïve and experienced | 585 treatments (277 VDZ, 308 ADA) | 56 weeks | Clinical response (week 52): ADA: 69.1% and VDZ: 64.3% Mucosa healing: ADA: 33.8% and VDZ: 31.8% | No differences between VDZ and ADA |
Bohm et al. (2020) [14] | VDZ versus anti-TNFs (IFX, ADA, and CTZ) | Anti-TNF naïve and experienced | 1266 patients (659VDZ) | 1 year | Steroid-free clinical remission: HR 1.250, 95% CI 0.677–2.310 Endoscopic remission: HR 0.827, 95% CI 0.595–1.151 Noninfectious serious adverse events: OR 0.072, 95% CI 0.012–0.242 Serious infections: OR 1.183, 95% CI 0.786–1.795 | Lower risk of noninfectious serious adverse events, but not serious infections, with VDZ vs. anti-TNF No significant difference for achieving disease remission (clinical and endoscopic) |
Authors (Year) | Biological Drugs | Patients | Sample Size | Follow-Up | Main Results | Conclusion |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Shing et al. (2017) [64] | IFX versus ADA | Anti-TNF naïve | 171 IFX, 104 ADA (propensity-score-matched cohort) | All-cause hospitalization rate ADA vs. IFX: HR 1.84 (95% CI 1.18–2.85) UC-related hospitalization rate ADA vs. IFX: HR 1.71 (95% CI 0.95–3.07) | Higher risk of hospitalization with ADA than IFX | |
Bressler et al. (2021) [65] | Anti-TNFs versus VDZ | Anti-TNF naïve | 604 UC patients (138 IFX, 62 ADA, 24 GOL, 380 VDZ) | 24 months | Clinical response: anti-TNFs 86.2% vs. VDZ 88.3%; p = 0.64 Clinical remission: anti-TNFs 48.6% vs. VDZ 65.9%; p = 0.09 Mucosal healing: anti-TNFs 80.6% vs. VDZ 86.6%; p = 0.66 | No difference between anti-TNFs and VDZ |
Helwing et al. (2020) [66] | Anti-TNFs versus VDZ | 46.5% anti-TNF naïve | 133 UC (57 anti-TNFs, 76 VDZ) | 26 weeks | Clinical remission in bio-naïve: anti-TNFs 31.5% vs. VDZ 50.1%; p = 0.15 | Anti-TNFs and VDZ are effective |
Patel et al. (2019) [67] | VDZ versus IFX | Anti-TNF naïve | 1721 (542 VDZ, 1179 anti-TNFs) | 24 months | Treatment persistence rates at 12 months: VDZ 84.5% vs. anti-TNFs 77.5%; p = 0.006 Treatment persistence rates at 24 months: VDZ 77.6% vs. anti-TNFs 64.6%; p = 0.0005 | VDZ is superior to anti-TNFs in long-term effectiveness |
Allamneni et al. (2018) [68] | VDZ versus IFX | 42.4% anti-TNF naïve | 59 patients (32 VDZ, 27 IFX) | Until assessment for clinical response | Clinical response rates in bio-naïve: VDZ 6.74/100 person-weeks vs. IFX 6.48/100 person-weeks | No difference between VDZ and IFX |
Situation | Recommendation |
---|---|
Luminal CD | IFX and ADA seem to be the best options UST seems useful too VDZ seems useful too |
Fistulizing CD | IFX seems to be the best option ADA, UST, and VDZ seem useful too |
Acute severe UC | IFX |
Moderate–severe UC | IFX and VDZ seem to be the best options GOL and UST are useful too ADA seems to be less effective |
HLA-DQA1*05 (patients are at risk of secondary loss of response due to immunogenicity) | Use anti-TNF combination therapy or other molecules (in patients at risk of adverse events due to combination therapy, other biologics could be preferred) |
Pregnancy desire | The drugs with more evidence are anti-TNFs UST and VDZ also seem to be safe |
Elderly patients | UST and VDZ could be preferred, especially if we want to avoid combination therapy with anti-TNFs |
Arthropathy • IBD active and axial/peripheral inflammation • IBD inactive and active arthropathy • IBD active and inactive arthropathy | UC: IFX, ADA, GOL CD: IFX, ADA Anti-TNFs also effective for IBD (rheumatologic dose) Select biologic according to IBD algorithms, suggest anti-TNFs as first choice |
Episcleritis or uveitis | Anti-TNFs (more evidence with ADA) |
Erythema nodosum and pyoderma gangrenosum | Anti-TNFs |
Psoriasis associated | Anti-TNFs or UST |
Hidradenitis suppurativa | Anti-TNFs |
Patients’ route of administration preference | • Subcutaneous: UC (in order of preference: GOL, UST, ADA)*, CD (ADA, UST)* • Intravenous: IFX, VDZ* |
Low adherence | Biologic with intravenous administration could be preferred |
Low resources | Anti-TNF biosimilars could be preferred |
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Laredo, V.; Gargallo-Puyuelo, C.J.; Gomollón, F. How to Choose the Biologic Therapy in a Bio-naïve Patient with Inflammatory Bowel Disease. J. Clin. Med. 2022, 11, 829. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11030829
Laredo V, Gargallo-Puyuelo CJ, Gomollón F. How to Choose the Biologic Therapy in a Bio-naïve Patient with Inflammatory Bowel Disease. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2022; 11(3):829. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11030829
Chicago/Turabian StyleLaredo, Viviana, Carla J. Gargallo-Puyuelo, and Fernando Gomollón. 2022. "How to Choose the Biologic Therapy in a Bio-naïve Patient with Inflammatory Bowel Disease" Journal of Clinical Medicine 11, no. 3: 829. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11030829
APA StyleLaredo, V., Gargallo-Puyuelo, C. J., & Gomollón, F. (2022). How to Choose the Biologic Therapy in a Bio-naïve Patient with Inflammatory Bowel Disease. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 11(3), 829. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11030829