Volume 34, Issue 12 pp. 2090-2095
Gastroenterology

Outcome of elective switching to vedolizumab in inflammatory bowel disease patients under tumor necrosis factor antagonist-maintained clinical remission

Yunwei Wang

Yunwei Wang

Inflammatory Bowel Disease Center, University of Chicago Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, USA

Search for more papers by this author
Jennifer Wang

Jennifer Wang

Inflammatory Bowel Disease Center, University of Chicago Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, USA

Search for more papers by this author
Joel Pekow

Joel Pekow

Inflammatory Bowel Disease Center, University of Chicago Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, USA

Search for more papers by this author
Sushila Dalal

Sushila Dalal

Inflammatory Bowel Disease Center, University of Chicago Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, USA

Search for more papers by this author
Russell D Cohen

Russell D Cohen

Inflammatory Bowel Disease Center, University of Chicago Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, USA

Search for more papers by this author
Jacob Ollech

Jacob Ollech

Inflammatory Bowel Disease Center, University of Chicago Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, USA

Search for more papers by this author
Amanda Israel

Amanda Israel

Inflammatory Bowel Disease Center, University of Chicago Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, USA

Search for more papers by this author
Benjamin D Shogan

Benjamin D Shogan

Inflammatory Bowel Disease Center, University of Chicago Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, USA

Search for more papers by this author
Dejan Micic

Dejan Micic

Inflammatory Bowel Disease Center, University of Chicago Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, USA

Search for more papers by this author
Lisa Cannon

Lisa Cannon

Inflammatory Bowel Disease Center, University of Chicago Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, USA

Search for more papers by this author
Konstantin Umanskiy

Konstantin Umanskiy

Inflammatory Bowel Disease Center, University of Chicago Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, USA

Search for more papers by this author
Roger Hurst

Roger Hurst

Inflammatory Bowel Disease Center, University of Chicago Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, USA

Search for more papers by this author
Neil Hyman

Neil Hyman

Inflammatory Bowel Disease Center, University of Chicago Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, USA

Search for more papers by this author
David T Rubin

David T Rubin

Inflammatory Bowel Disease Center, University of Chicago Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, USA

Search for more papers by this author
Atsushi Sakuraba

Corresponding Author

Atsushi Sakuraba

Inflammatory Bowel Disease Center, University of Chicago Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, USA

Correspondence

Dr Atsushi Sakuraba, Inflammatory Bowel Disease Center, University of Chicago Medicine, 5841 S. Maryland Ave. MC 4076, Chicago, IL 60637, USA.

Email: [email protected]

Search for more papers by this author
First published: 06 June 2019
Citations: 8
Declaration of conflict of interest: Y. W., J. W., N. P., J. O., A. I., B. S., L. C., K. U., R. H., and N. H. have no conflict of interest to declare. J. P. received grants from Abbvie and Takeda, consulting from Verastem, and advisory board for Pfizer and Janssen. S. D. has an investigator-initiated research grant from Pfizer. R. D. C. is a consultant and/or a member of a scientific advisory board for Abbvie, Celgene, Entera Health, Hospira, Janssen, Pfizer, Sandoz Biopharmaceuticals, Takeda, and UCB Pharma. Speaker's bureau for Abbvie and Takeda. D. T. R. is a consultant and received a grant support from Takeda, Janssen, and AbbVie, consultant for Pfizer and Amgen. A. S. is a speaker's bureau for Mitsubishi-Tanabe and Takeda and consultant for Celltrion.
Financial support: No grants or funding related to this study.

Abstract

Background and Aim

Vedolizumab (VDZ) has been used in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients who failed anti-tumor necrosis factor (TNF) therapy. This study was to examine long-term outcome of IBD patients switching to VDZ from anti-TNF agents for reasons other than failure of therapy.

Methods

Inflammatory bowel disease patients at the University of Chicago IBD center who were in clinical remission with anti-TNF therapy and then electively changed to VDZ due to reasons other than loss of response were retrospectively analyzed. The primary outcome was the durability of clinical remission maintained by VDZ as assessed by Kaplan–Meier survival analysis. The proportion of patients in clinical and endoscopic remission at 6–12 months after switching to VDZ therapy was analyzed.

Results

A total of 41 patients (36 with Crohn's disease and 5 with ulcerative colitis) met the inclusion criteria and were in clinical remission at the time of switch. The majority of patients switched therapy due to adverse effects (56.1%) or infections (14.6%). During a median duration of 30 months (range 7–52) of VDZ therapy, 34 (82.9%) were in VDZ-maintained clinical remission. One (2.4%) and four (9.8%) patients discontinued VDZ due to flare and adverse effects, respectively. Endoscopic remission was present in 25 of 30 patients (83.3%) who had a follow-up colonoscopy.

Conclusions

Vedolizumab was effective and safe in maintaining remission in IBD patients who switched from anti-TNF agents due to reasons other than failure of therapy. Our results suggest that switching anti-TNF remitters to VDZ treatment is a safe practice in specific patient populations.

The full text of this article hosted at iucr.org is unavailable due to technical difficulties.