Litcius/Paper detail

Bayes‐based dosing of infliximab in inflammatory bowel diseases: Short‐term efficacy

Eugènia Santacana Juncosa, Lorena Rodríguez‐Alonso, Ariadna Padullés, Jordi Guardiola, Francisco Rodríguez‐Moranta, Katja Serra Nilsson, Jordi Bas Minguet, Francisco Morandeira Rego, Helena Colom, Núria Padullés Zamora

2020British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

AIMS: Therapeutic drug monitoring of infliximab can guide clinical decisions in patients with loss of response and in those who can benefit from a de-intensification. The aim of this study was to determine the impact of therapeutic drug monitoring combined with Bayesian forecasting methodology on clinical response in a real-world dataset of patients suffering from inflammatory bowel disease. METHODS: We performed a single-centre prospective study with one-group pre-test/post-test design in 108 adult inflammatory bowel disease patients treated with model-based dosing of infliximab maintenance treatment. We recorded clinical activity scores (Harvey-Bradshaw index and partial Mayo) and inflammatory biomarkers per patient. RESULTS: The initial infliximab regimen was maintained in 49 (45.4%) patients and was adjusted in 59 (54.6%) patients (34 treatment intensifications, 9 de-intensifications and 16 treatment discontinuations or therapy replacements). The median time from intervention to index measurement was 126 (103-160) days. The overall proportion of patients in clinical remission increased from 65.7% to 80.4% (P < .0001) and the median infliximab trough concentrations increased from 3.21 (0.99-5.45) to 5.13 mg/L (3.57-6.53) (P < .0001). In the intensified group, the remission rate increased from 35.3% to 61.8% (P = .001) and the percentage of patients in clinical remission or with mild symptoms increased from 76.5% to 94.1%. In the de-intensification cohort, no patients experienced an increase in the Harvey-Bradshaw index or partial Mayo scores, and all patients maintained an infliximab trough concentration of >5 mg/L. CONCLUSION: In our cohort of inflammatory bowel disease patients, Bayes-based optimized dosing improved the short-term efficacy of infliximab treatment.

Topics & Concepts

InfliximabDosingMedicineInflammatory Bowel DiseasesTerm (time)Inflammatory bowel diseaseInternal medicineBayes' theoremGastroenterologyBayesian probabilityTumor necrosis factor alphaComputer scienceArtificial intelligenceDiseasePhysicsQuantum mechanicsInflammatory Bowel DiseaseBiosimilars and Bioanalytical MethodsLiver Diseases and Immunity