1. Randomised clinical trial: a comparative dose-finding study of three arms of dual release mesalazine for maintaining remission in ulcerative colitis.
- Author
-
Kruis W, Jonaitis L, Pokrotnieks J, Mikhailova TL, Horynski M, Bátovský M, Lozynsky YS, Zakharash Y, Rácz I, Kull K, Vcev A, Faszczyk M, Dilger K, Greinwald R, and Mueller R
- Subjects
- Administration, Oral, Adult, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Double-Blind Method, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Remission Induction, Statistics as Topic, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal administration & dosage, Colitis, Ulcerative drug therapy, Mesalamine administration & dosage
- Abstract
Background: Comparative data regarding different regimens of oral mesalazine (mesalamine) for maintaining remission in ulcerative colitis are limited., Aim: To evaluate whether 3.0 g mesalazine once-daily (OD) is superior to the standard treatment of 0.5 g mesalazine three times daily (t.d.s.) and to prove the therapeutic equivalence of OD vs. t.d.s. dosing of total 1.5 g mesalazine for remission maintenance in patients with ulcerative colitis., Methods: A 1-year, multicentre, double-blind, double-dummy study was undertaken in patients with endoscopically and histologically confirmed ulcerative colitis in remission. Patients were randomised to oral mesalazine 3.0 g OD, 1.5 g OD or 0.5 g t.d.s. The primary efficacy endpoint was the proportion of patients still in clinical remission at the final visit, with clinical relapse being defined as CAI score >4 and an increase of ≥3 from baseline., Results: The primary efficacy endpoint occurred in 162/217 3.0 g OD patients (75%), 129/212 1.5 g OD patients (61%) and 150/218 0.5 g t.d.s. patients (69%) in the intention-to-treat population, and in 152/177 (86%), 121/182 (67%) and 144/185 (78%) in the per protocol population respectively; 3.0 g OD was superior to both low-dose regimens for the primary endpoint (i.e. P < 0.001, 3.0 g OD vs. 1.5 g OD; P = 0.024, 3.0 g OD vs. 0.5 g t.d.s.; superiority test, per protocol population). Safety analysis, including comprehensive renal monitoring, revealed no concern in any treatment group., Conclusion: Mesalazine 3.0 g once daily was the most effective dose for maintenance of remission in ulcerative colitis of the three regimens assessed, with no penalty in terms of safety., (© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF