1. Subcutaneous Vedolizumab Treatment in a Real-World Inflammatory Bowel Disease Cohort Switched From Intravenous Vedolizumab: Eighteen-Month Prospective Follow-up Study.
- Author
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Wiken TH, Høivik ML, Anisdahl K, Buer L, Warren DJ, Bolstad N, Hagen M, Moum BA, and Medhus AW
- Abstract
Background: Vedolizumab has since 2021 been available as a subcutaneous formulation. We aimed to assess 18-month drug persistence and possible predictive factors associated with discontinuation, safety, serum drug profile, drug dosing, and disease activity in a real-world cohort of patients with inflammatory bowel disease switched from intravenous to subcutaneous vedolizumab maintenance treatment., Methods: Eligible patients were switched to subcutaneous vedolizumab and followed for 18 months or until discontinuation of subcutaneous treatment. Data on preferred route of administration, adverse events, drug dosing, serum-vedolizumab, disease activity, fecal calprotectin, and C-reactive protein were collected. Persistence was described using Kaplan-Meier analysis. The impact of clinical and biochemical variables on persistence was analyzed with Cox proportional hazard models., Results: We included 108 patients, and the estimated 18-month drug persistence was 73.6% (95% CI [64.2-80.1]). Patients in clinical remission at switch were less likely to discontinue SC treatment (HR = 0.34, 95% CI [0.16-0.73], P = .006), and patients favoring intravenous treatment at switch were almost 3 times more likely to discontinue (HR = 2.78, 95% CI [1.31-5.90], P = .008). Four patients discontinued subcutaneous vedolizumab due to injection site reactions. At 18 months, 88% of patients administered subcutaneous vedolizumab with an interval of ≥ 14 days, and serum-vedolizumab was 39.1 mg/L. Disease activity was stable during follow-up., Conclusions: Three of the four patients remained on subcutaneous vedolizumab after 18 months, a large proportion received treatment at standard dosing intervals, and disease activity remained stable. This indicates that switching from intravenous to subcutaneous vedolizumab treatment is convenient and safe., Competing Interests: T.H.W. and K.A. report consultant fees from Takeda outside the submitted work. A.W.M. reports research grant from Takeda. B.M. reports consultant fees from Takeda, Janssen, AbbVie, Pfizer; advisory board Takeda, Janssen, AbbVie, Pfizer, Sandoz, Pharma Cosmos; speaker fees from Takeda, Janssen, AbbVie, Sandoz, Orion Pharma. M.L.H. reports speaker fees from AbbVie, Meda, Tillotts, and Takeda; advisory board Takeda. M.H., L.B., N.B., and D.J.W. report no conflicts of interest., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Crohn's & Colitis Foundation.)
- Published
- 2024
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