ORLANDO — Vedolizumab (Entyvio) and infliximab (Remicade) led to mostly similar 1-year outcomes in patients with ulcerative colitis previously untreated with a biologic, but the integrin receptor antagonist vedolizumab slightly edged out the tumor necrosis factor (TNF) blocker in some areas, according to a real-world dataset.
At 52 weeks, there was no significant difference in clinical remission (82.3% vs 77.4%, respectively) or steroid-free clinical remission (84.8% vs 83.1%), but more patients taking vedolizumab achieved endoscopic remission (47.4% vs 33.1%, P=0.03), Sandro da Costa Ferreira, MD, of Ribeirão Preto Medical School at the University of São Paulo in Brazil, and colleagues reported.
“Both vedolizumab and infliximab are effective in biologic-naive ulcerative colitis patients,” the authors concluded in a poster presentation at the Advances in Inflammatory Bowel Diseases meeting. “However, vedolizumab demonstrated superior endoscopic outcomes, higher treatment persistence, and a better safety profile, supporting its use as a first-line therapy.”
The two agents are standard initial options for moderate-to-severe disease, but little data exist comparing their efficacy in the real world. No head-to-head trials exist and a prior comparison of the drugs’ respective clinical trial data suggested similar rates of clinical remission but a higher likelihood of steroid-free clinical remission and endoscopic remission with infliximab.
For their study, da Costa Ferreira and colleagues conducted a retrospective, multicenter study of 297 patients with moderate-to-severe active ulcerative colitis, defined as having a total Mayo score of 6-12 and an endoscopic score of at least 2. None of the patients had previously received biologics.
The researchers assessed patient outcomes at 12 weeks (post-induction), 26 weeks, and 52 weeks, with 141 patients taking the integrin receptor antagonist vedolizumab and 156 patients taking the TNF blocker infliximab. Only 52-week data were reported at the meeting.
For the primary endpoints, the authors defined clinical remission as a partial Mayo score of 2 or less and endoscopic remission as a Mayo subscore of 0. They also used propensity-score adjustment to correct for bias.
In secondary endpoints, clinical response was not significantly different at 52 weeks between those taking vedolizumab and those taking infliximab (90.7% vs 88.3%). Biochemical remission — defined as C-reactive protein of no more than 0.5 mg/dL and/or fecal calprotectin of no more than 150 μ/g — was also no different at that point (42.5% vs 35.1%, respectively).
However, vedolizumab outperformed infliximab in the proportion of patients who had endoscopic response — an endoscopic Mayo subscore of 0-1 — and in rates of treatment persistency, with less need for drug optimization:
- Endoscopic response: 78.4% vs 62.7%, respectively (P
- Treatment persistency: 80.8% vs 61.8% (P
- Drug optimization: 19.2% vs 36.7% (P=0.03)
Need for hospitalization was also substantially and significantly lower for patients on vedolizumab (0.71% vs 9.1% with infliximab, P
Incidence of adverse events (AEs) was numerically higher for infliximab than vedolizumab, though the difference was not significant (46.1% vs 34%, P=0.17). Infection rates were also similar between (20.5% vs 15.8%, respectively). More arthralgia occurred with vedolizumab than infliximab (12.1% vs 3.8%) but less infusion reactions (none vs 5.1%)
More serious AEs occurred with infliximab (18.5%) than vedolizumab (6.4%), but significance for this difference was not reported.
Disclosures
The authors did not report having any disclosures or external funding.
Primary Source
Advances in Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
Source Reference: da Costa Ferreira S, et al “Clinical effectiveness and safety of vedolizumab versus infliximab in biologic-naïve ulcerative colitis patients: a real-world multicentric observational study” AIBD 2024.
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Publish date : 2024-12-19 15:14:04
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