12 results on '"Gatof, D"'
Search Results
2. Ustekinumab as Induction and Maintenance Therapy for Ulcerative Colitis
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Sands, B. E., Sandborn, W. J., Panaccione, R., O'Brien, C. D., Zhang, H., Johanns, J., Adedokun, O. J., Li, K., Peyrin-Biroulet, L., Van Assche, G., Danese, S., Targan, S., Abreu, M. T., Hisamatsu, T., Szapary, P., Brown S, Marano C., Connor, S, De Cruz, P, Ding, Nj, Florin, T, Hendy, P, Leong, R, Moore, G, Pavli, P, Sparrow, M, Gassner, S, Vogelsang, H, Baert, F, Colard, A, De Vos, M, D'Heygere, F, Ferrante, M, Louis, E, Staessen, D, Berova, T, Churchev, J, Draganova, R, Gancheva, D, Ivanova, N, Marinova, I, Markov, M, Nikolov, R, Tsonev, N, Vassileva, G, Afif, W, Berstein, C, Bressler, B, Jairath, V, Lachance, Jr, Singh, R, Tilbe, K, Komarek, V, Kozeluhova, J, Lukas, M, Volfova, M, Dahlerup, J, Altwegg, R, Beorchia, S, Bouguen, G, Cadiot, G, Dupas, Jl, Desreumaux, P, Flourie, B, Grimaud, Jc, Guillaud, O, Moreau, J, Roblin, X, Zerbib, F, Baumgart, D, Beckebaum, S, Bokemeyer, B, Ebert, M, Hasselblatt, P, Lügering, A, Maaser, C, Schiefke, I, Schreiber, S, Seidler, U, Altorjay, I, Kiss, Gg, Literati-Nagy, B, Patai, A, Pecsi, G, Salamon, A, Schnabel, R, Székely, A, Tulassay, Z, Varga, M, Fich, A, Fishman, S, Konikoff, F, Lichtenstein, L, Rainis, T, Sbeit, W, Schwartz, D, Annese, V, Biancone, L, Bossa, F, Costintino, R, Danese, S, Fries, W, Gasbarrini, A, Guidi, L, Kohn, A, Maconi, G, Rocca, R, Rogai, F, Villa, E, Zoli, G, Akiho, H, Aoyama, N, Arisawa, T, Hidaka, H, Hisamatsu, T, Horiki, N, Inaba, T, Inoue, S, Ishida, T, Ishida, H, Ishiguro, Y, Ishihara, S, Iwabuchi, M, Kato, J, Katsushima, S, Kobayashi, T, Kojima, Y, Kurihara, H, Masuo, T, Matsui, T, Matsumoto, T, Matsuoka, K, Mitsuyama, K, Motoya, S, Nakagawa, T, Nakai, K, Nakamura, S, Niihara, T, Ohnishi, Y, Ohta, A, Osada, T, Ryuichi, I, Sakai, Y, Sakata, Y, Sameshima, Y, Sano, K, Shibatoge, M, Shibuya, T, Suzuki, Y, Takeshima, F, Tanaka, S, Taruishi, M, Tokito, S, Ueo, T, Watanabe, K, Yamagami, H, Cheon, Jh, Cho, Kb, Knowles, Kim, Kim, Hj, Kim, Y, Lee, Km, Yang, Sk, D'Haens, G, Pierik, M, Gearry, R, Inns, S, Rowbotham, D, Schultz, M, Bochenek, A, Gawdis-Wojnarska, B, Kleczkowski, D, Leszczyszyn, J, Malecka-Panas, E, Mamos, A, Petryka, R, Regula, J, Rozciecha, J, Stefanuik, P, Wozniak-Stolarska, B, Cimpoeru, N, Craciun, E, Ovidiu, Cf, Goldis, E, Ionita-Radu, F, Lazar, D, Suciu, I, Abdulkhakov, R, Alikhanov, B, Apartsin, K, Bakulin, I, Belousova, E, Gofman, A, Grinevich, V, Kulyapin, A, Nizov, A, Osipenko, M, Simanenkov, V, Tkachev, A, Uspenskiy, Y, Valuyskikh, E, Jovanovic, I, Nagorni, A, Svorcan, P, Zdravkovic, N, Bunganic, I, Abrahamovych, O, Bilianskyi, L, Datsenko, O, Golovchenko, O, Kharchenko, N, Klymenko, V, Levchenko, O, Lozynskyy, Y, Murenets, N, Oliinyk, O, Prystupa, L, Pyrogovskyi, V, Reznikova, V, Rishko, I, Stanislavchuk, M, Vizir, V, Yatsyshyn, R, Arasaradnam, R, Bloom, S, Cummings, F, Iqbal, T, Irving, P, Kaser, A, Shonde, A, Subramanian, S, Aberra, F, Aguilar, H, Araya, V, Bakken, A, Beaulieu, D, Cappa, Ja, Chiorean, M, Cohen, N, Dryden, G, Duvall, G, Ehrlich, A, Eisner, M, Ertan, A, Fogel, R, Friedenberg, K, Gatof, D, Glover, S, Grosman, I, Gunaratnam, N, Gupta, N, Haynes, P, Hemaidan, A, Higgins, P, Hou, J, Hudesman, D, Iskandar, H, Jazrawi, S, Jones, M, Karnam, U, Khurana, S, Killpack, M, Kreines, M, Lawlor, G, Lee, S, Loftus, E, Lukin, Dj, Marcet, J, Mattar, M, Melmed, G, Minor, T, Mirkin, K, Mutlu, E, Nichols, M, Nudell, J, Rai, R, Ramos, C, Mcleod, Randall, Rausher, D, Ritter, T, Singh Saini, S, Salzberg, B, Saubermann, L, Scherl, E, Sedghi, S, Sellin, J, Shafran, I, Sorrentino, D, Suiter, D, Swaminath, A, Tiongco, F, Vrabie, R, Walp, K, Warner, N, Winstead, N, Wolf, Dc, Woods, J, Yen, E, Younes, Z., Centre Hospitalier Régional Universitaire de Nancy (CHRU Nancy), Nutrition-Génétique et Exposition aux Risques Environnementaux (NGERE), Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Université de Lorraine (UL), Humanitas Clinical and Research Center [Rozzano, Milan, Italy], RS: NUTRIM - R2 - Liver and digestive health, MUMC+: MA Maag Darm Lever (9), Interne Geneeskunde, Sands, Be, Sandborn, Wj, Panaccione, R, O'Brien, Cd, Zhang, H, Johanns, J, Adedokun, Oj, Li, K, Peyrin-Biroulet, L, Van Assche, G, Danese, S, Targan, S, Abreu, Mt, Hisamatsu, T, Szapary, P, and Marano, C
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Adult ,Male ,Infusions ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,Injections, Subcutaneous ,Anti-Inflammatory Agents ,Ulcerative ,Klinikai orvostudományok ,Article ,Injections ,Maintenance Chemotherapy ,Dose-Response Relationship ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Double-Blind Method ,INFLIXIMAB ,Colitis, Ulcerative ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Female ,Humans ,Induction Chemotherapy ,Infusions, Intravenous ,Patient Acuity ,Remission Induction ,Ustekinumab ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,ACTIVITY INDEXES ,Subcutaneous ,Orvostudományok ,General Medicine ,EFFICACY ,Colitis ,3. Good health ,INFECTIONS ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Drug ,Intravenous - Abstract
The efficacy of ustekinumab, an antagonist of the p40 subunit of interleukin-12 and interleukin-23, as induction and maintenance therapy in patients with ulcerative colitis is unknown.We evaluated ustekinumab as 8-week induction therapy and 44-week maintenance therapy in patients with moderate-to-severe ulcerative colitis. A total of 961 patients were randomly assigned to receive an intravenous induction dose of ustekinumab (either 130 mg [320 patients] or a weight-range-based dose that approximated 6 mg per kilogram of body weight [322]) or placebo (319). Patients who had a response to induction therapy 8 weeks after administration of intravenous ustekinumab were randomly assigned again to receive subcutaneous maintenance injections of 90 mg of ustekinumab (either every 12 weeks [172 patients] or every 8 weeks [176]) or placebo (175). The primary end point in the induction trial (week 8) and the maintenance trial (week 44) was clinical remission (defined as a total score of ≤2 on the Mayo scale [range, 0 to 12, with higher scores indicating more severe disease] and no subscore1 [range, 0 to 3] on any of the four Mayo scale components).The percentage of patients who had clinical remission at week 8 among patients who received intravenous ustekinumab at a dose of 130 mg (15.6%) or 6 mg per kilogram (15.5%) was significantly higher than that among patients who received placebo (5.3%) (P0.001 for both comparisons). Among patients who had a response to induction therapy with ustekinumab and underwent a second randomization, the percentage of patients who had clinical remission at week 44 was significantly higher among patients assigned to 90 mg of subcutaneous ustekinumab every 12 weeks (38.4%) or every 8 weeks (43.8%) than among those assigned to placebo (24.0%) (P = 0.002 and P0.001, respectively). The incidence of serious adverse events with ustekinumab was similar to that with placebo. Through 52 weeks of exposure, there were two deaths (one each from acute respiratory distress syndrome and hemorrhage from esophageal varices) and seven cases of cancer (one each of prostate, colon, renal papillary, and rectal cancer and three nonmelanoma skin cancers) among 825 patients who received ustekinumab and no deaths and one case of cancer (testicular cancer) among 319 patients who received placebo.Ustekinumab was more effective than placebo for inducing and maintaining remission in patients with moderate-to-severe ulcerative colitis. (Funded by Janssen Research and Development; UNIFI ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT02407236.).
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- 2019
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3. Vedolizumab as Induction and Maintenance Therapy for Crohn's Disease
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Sandborn, Wj, Feagan, Bg, Rutgeerts, P, Hanauer, S, Colombel, Jf, Sands, Be, Lukas, M, Fedorak, Rn, Lee, S, Bressler, B, Fox, I, Rosario, M, Sankoh, S, Xu, J, Stephens, K, Milch, C, Parikh, A, Bampton P, GEMINI 2 Study G. r. o. u. p., Borody, T, Chung, A, Debinski, H, Florin, T, Hetzel, D, Jakobovits, S, Lawrance, I, Leong, R, Macrae, F, Mitchell, B, Moore, G, Pavli, P, Samuel, D, Weltman, M, Haas, T, Reinisch, W, Vogel, W, Baert, F, De Maeyer, M, De Vos, M, Dewit, O, D'Haens, G, Louis, E, Muls, V, Van Assche, G, Krastev, Z, Nikolovska, D, Petrov, P, Petrov, A, Stoinov, S, Tchernev, K, Vasileva, G, Aumais, G, Axler, J, Bailey, R, Bernstein, C, Bitton, A, Bourdages, R, Cohen, A, Devroede, G, Dhalla, S, Feagan, B, Fedorak, R, Green, D, Greenberg, G, Jones, J, Larkai, E, Macintosh, D, Panaccione, R, Ponich, T, Singh, R, Sy, R, Wiesinger, H, Albin, A, Douda, L, Horny, I, Stehlik, J, Stuksa, J, Volfova, M, Vyhnalek, P, Zadorova, Z, Andersen, V, Bendtsen, F, Fallingborg, J, Rannem, T, Maelt, A, Margus, B, Salupere, R, Allez, M, Des Varennes SB, Desreumaux, P, Dupas, Jl, Grimaud, Jc, Hebuterne, X, Lerebours, E, Picon, L, Zerbib, F, Aldinger, V, Baumgart, D, Buening, C, Dollinger, M, Hoffmann, P, Howaldt, S, Klaus, J, Konturek, Jw, Krummenerl, T, Malfertheiner, P, Schmidt, W, Schreiber, S, Seidler, U, Stallmach, A, Stremmel, W, Zeitz, M, Mantzaris, G, Triantafyllou, K, Ng, C, Bene, L, Fazekas, I, Fejes, R, Gall, J, Horvat, G, Hunyady, B, Salamon, A, Toth, T, Tulassay, Z, Varga, E, Varga, M, Varga Szabo, L, Vincze, A, Oddsson, E, Örvar, K, Ahuja, V, Amarapurkar, D, Chandra, A, Koshy, A, Krishna, P, Ramakrishna, K, Reddy, N, Thorat, V, Patchett, S, Ryan, B, Ben Horin, S, Fishman, S, Lavy, A, Rachmilewitz, D, Ardizzone, S, Corazziari, E, Danese, S, Fries, Walter, Gasbarrini, A, Kohn, A, Sturniolo, Gc, Danilans, A, George, Am, Hilmi, In, Engels, Lg, Ponsioen, Cy, van der Woude CJ, Gearry, R, Haines, M, Schultz, M, Wallace, I, Wyeth, J, Florholmen, J, Jahnsen, J, Lygren, I, Röseth, A, Ciecko Michalska, I, Gonciarz, M, Horynski, M, Huk, J, Jamrozik Kruk, Z, Janke, A, Klupinska, G, Marecik, J, Paradowski, L, Rudzinski, J, Rydzewska, G, Han, Ds, Hong, Sp, Kim, Hj, Kim, Js, Kim, Ko, Kim, Yh, Yang, Sk, Gheorghe, Ls, Voiosu, Rm, Alexeeva, O, Baranovsky, A, Bunkova, E, Burnevich, E, Dolgikh, O, Grinevich, V, Lakhin, A, Tarabar, D, Ling, Kl, Bunganic, I, Cernok, S, Gregus, M, Coetzer, T, Grundling, H, Moola, Sa, Wright, Jp, Ziady, C, Bermejo, F, Calvet, X, Herrerias, Jm, Perez Calle JL, Perez Gisbert, J, Hertervig, E, Karlen, P, Michetti, P, Rogler, G, Seibold, F, Wu, Dc, Atug, O, Kurdas, Oo, Datsenko, O, Dorofyeyev, A, Dudar, L, Golovchenko, O, Klyarits'Ka, I, Skrypnyk, I, Hawthorne, Ab, Middleton, S, Abreu, M, Bala, N, Becker, S, Behm, B, Braun, R, Bukhari, M, Chen, S, Coates, A, Dar, S, Dassopoulos, T, De Villiers, W, Desautels, S, Desta, T, Dimitroff, J, Dryden, G, Duvall, A, Farraye, F, Fein, S, Liu, Bf, Gatof, D, Geenen, D, Ginsburg, P, Glombicki, A, Glover, S, Gordon, G, Grisolano, S, Hanson, J, Hardi, R, Hoffman, B, Isaacs, K, Kim, C, Koval, G, Lashner, B, Lawitz, E, Leman, B, Levine, J, Loftus, E, Mahadevan, U, Mannon, P, Marcet, J, Matsuyama, R, Matusow, G, Mccabe, R, Mirkin, K, Murphy, M, Mushahwar, A, Mutlu, E, Nagrani, M, Nguyen, D, Nichols, M, Nieves Ramirez, A, Oubre, B, Pace, S, Pandak, W, Perera, L, Quadri, A, Quallich, L, Rajapakse, R, Randall, C, Regueiro, M, Safdi, A, Sandborn, W, Sands, B, Saubermann, L, Scherl, E, Schwartz, D, Sedghi, S, Shafran, I, Shepard, R, Siegel, C, Stein, L, Tatum, H, Triebling, A, Vasudeva, R, Winston, B, Wolf, D, Younes, Z, Jewell, D, Mahon, J, Rothstein, R, Snydman, D, Massaro, J, Clifford, D, Berger, J, Major, E, Provenzale, J, Lev, M., GEMINI 2 Study Group, Bampton, P., Borody, T., Chung, A., Debinski, H., Florin, T., Hetzel, D., Jakobovits, S., Lawrance, I., Leong, R., Macrae, F., Mitchell, B., Moore, G., Pavli, P., Samuel, D., Weltman, M., Haas, T., Reinisch, W., Vogel, W., Baert, F., De Maeyer, M., De Vos, M., Dewit, O., D'Haens, G., Louis, E., Muls, V., Van Assche, G., Krastev, Z., Nikolovska, D., Petrov, P., Petrov, A., Stoinov, S., Tchernev, K., Vasileva, G., Aumais, G., Axler, J., Bailey, R., Bernstein, C., Bitton, A., Bourdages, R., Bressler, B., Cohen, A., Devroede, G., Dhalla, S., Feagan, B., Fedorak, R., Green, D., Greenberg, G., Jones, J., Larkai, E., MacIntosh, D., Panaccione, R., Ponich, T., Singh, R., Sy, R., Wiesinger, H., Albin, A., Douda, L., Horny, I., Lukas, M., Stehlik, J., Stuksa, J., Volfova, M., Vyhnalek, P., Zadorova, Z., Andersen, V., Bendtsen, F., Fallingborg, J., Rannem, T., Maelt, A., Margus, B., Salupere, R., Allez, M., Des Varennes SB., Desreumaux, P., Dupas, JL., Grimaud, JC., Hebuterne, X., Lerebours, E., Picon, L., Zerbib, F., Aldinger, V., Baumgart, D., Buening, C., Dollinger, M., Hoffmann, P., Howaldt, S., Klaus, J., Konturek, JW., Krummenerl, T., Malfertheiner, P., Schmidt, W., Schreiber, S., Seidler, U., Stallmach, A., Stremmel, W., Zeitz, M., Mantzaris, G., Triantafyllou, K., Ng, C., Bene, L., Fazekas, I., Fejes, R., Gall, J., Horvat, G., Hunyady, B., Salamon, A., Toth, T., Tulassay, Z., Varga, E., Varga, M., Varga-Szabo, L., Vincze, A., Oddsson, E., Örvar, K., Ahuja, V., Amarapurkar, D., Chandra, A., Koshy, A., Krishna, P., Ramakrishna, K., Reddy, N., Thorat, V., Patchett, S., Ryan, B., Ben Horin, S., Fishman, S., Lavy, A., Rachmilewitz, D., Ardizzone, S., Corazziari, E., Danese, S., Fries, W., Gasbarrini, A., Kohn, A., Sturniolo, GC., Danilans, A., George, AM., Hilmi, IN., Engels, LG., Ponsioen, CY., van der Woude CJ., Gearry, R., Haines, M., Schultz, M., Wallace, I., Wyeth, J., Florholmen, J., Jahnsen, J., Lygren, I., Röseth, A., Ciecko-Michalska, I., Gonciarz, M., Horynski, M., Huk, J., Jamrozik-Kruk, Z., Janke, A., Klupinska, G., Marecik, J., Paradowski, L., Rudzinski, J., Rydzewska, G., Han, DS., Hong, SP., Kim, HJ., Kim, JS., Kim, KO., Kim, YH., Yang, SK., Gheorghe, LS., Voiosu, RM., Alexeeva, O., Baranovsky, A., Bunkova, E., Burnevich, E., Dolgikh, O., Grinevich, V., Lakhin, A., Tarabar, D., Ling, KL., Bunganic, I., Cernok, S., Gregus, M., Coetzer, T., Grundling, H., Moola, SA., Wright, JP., Ziady, C., Bermejo, F., Calvet, X., Herrerias, JM., Perez Calle JL., Perez Gisbert, J., Hertervig, E., Karlen, P., Michetti, P., Rogler, G., Seibold, F., Wu, DC., Atug, O., Kurdas, OO., Datsenko, O., Dorofyeyev, A., Dudar, L., Golovchenko, O., Klyarits'ka, I., Skrypnyk, I., Hawthorne, AB., Middleton, S., Abreu, M., Bala, N., Becker, S., Behm, B., Braun, R., Bukhari, M., Chen, S., Coates, A., Dar, S., Dassopoulos, T., De Villiers, W., Desautels, S., Desta, T., Dimitroff, J., Dryden, G., Duvall, A., Farraye, F., Fein, S., Liu, BF., Gatof, D., Geenen, D., Ginsburg, P., Glombicki, A., Glover, S., Gordon, G., Grisolano, S., Hanauer, S., Hanson, J., Hardi, R., Hoffman, B., Isaacs, K., Kim, C., Koval, G., Lashner, B., Lawitz, E., Lee, S., Leman, B., Levine, J., Loftus, E., Mahadevan, U., Mannon, P., Marcet, J., Matsuyama, R., Matusow, G., McCabe, R., Mirkin, K., Murphy, M., Mushahwar, A., Mutlu, E., Nagrani, M., Nguyen, D., Nichols, M., Nieves Ramirez, A., Oubre, B., Pace, S., Pandak, W., Perera, L., Quadri, A., Quallich, L., Rajapakse, R., Randall, C., Regueiro, M., Safdi, A., Sandborn, W., Sands, B., Saubermann, L., Scherl, E., Schwartz, D., Sedghi, S., Shafran, I., Shepard, R., Siegel, C., Stein, L., Tatum, H., Triebling, A., Vasudeva, R., Winston, B., Wolf, D., Younes, Z., Feagan, BG., Colombel, JF., Rutgeerts, P., Sandborn, WJ., Sands, BE., Jewell, D., Mahon, J., Rothstein, R., Snydman, D., Massaro, J., Clifford, D., Berger, J., Major, E., Provenzale, J., Lev, M., and Medical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases
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Adult ,Male ,Integrins ,medicine.medical_specialty ,HUMAN POLYOMAVIRUSES ,JC ,Antibodies/blood ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized/adverse effects ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized/immunology ,Crohn Disease/drug therapy ,Double-Blind Method ,Drug Administration Schedule ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,Female ,Glucocorticoids/therapeutic use ,Humans ,Immunosuppressive Agents/therapeutic use ,Induction Chemotherapy ,Infusions, Intravenous/adverse effects ,Integrins/antagonists & inhibitors ,Integrins/immunology ,Maintenance Chemotherapy ,Middle Aged ,PROGRESSIVE MULTIFOCAL LEUKOENCEPHALOPATHY ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized ,Placebo ,Gastroenterology ,Inflammatory bowel disease ,Antibodies ,Vedolizumab ,CERTOLIZUMAB PEGOL ,Natalizumab ,Crohn Disease ,Maintenance therapy ,HUMANIZED ANTIBODY ,Internal medicine ,Ustekinumab ,medicine ,Certolizumab pegol ,Infusions, Intravenous ,Glucocorticoids ,NATALIZUMAB ,business.industry ,Induction chemotherapy ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,PROGRESSIVE MULTIFOCAL LEUKOENCEPHALOPATHY, RELAPSING MULTIPLE-SCLEROSIS, INFLAMMATORY-BOWEL-DISEASE, HUMAN POLYOMAVIRUSES, HUMANIZED ANTIBODY, CERTOLIZUMAB PEGOL, ULCERATIVE-COLITIS, RANDOMIZED-TRIAL, NATALIZUMAB, JC ,RANDOMIZED-TRIAL ,digestive system diseases ,Surgery ,ULCERATIVE-COLITIS ,RELAPSING MULTIPLE-SCLEROSIS ,business ,Immunosuppressive Agents ,INFLAMMATORY-BOWEL-DISEASE ,medicine.drug - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The efficacy of vedolizumab, an α4β7 integrin antibody, in Crohn's disease is unknown. METHODS: In an integrated study with separate induction and maintenance trials, we assessed intravenous vedolizumab therapy (300 mg) in adults with active Crohn's disease. In the induction trial, 368 patients were randomly assigned to receive vedolizumab or placebo at weeks 0 and 2 (cohort 1), and 747 patients received open-label vedolizumab at weeks 0 and 2 (cohort 2); disease status was assessed at week 6. In the maintenance trial, 461 patients who had had a response to vedolizumab were randomly assigned to receive placebo or vedolizumab every 8 or 4 weeks until week 52. RESULTS: At week 6, a total of 14.5% of the patients in cohort 1 who received vedolizumab and 6.8% who received placebo were in clinical remission (i.e., had a score on the Crohn's Disease Activity Index [CDAI] of ≤150, with scores ranging from 0 to approximately 600 and higher scores indicating greater disease activity) (P=0.02); a total of 31.4% and 25.7% of the patients, respectively, had a CDAI-100 response (≥100-point decrease in the CDAI score) (P=0.23). Among patients in cohorts 1 and 2 who had a response to induction therapy, 39.0% and 36.4% of those assigned to vedolizumab every 8 weeks and every 4 weeks, respectively, were in clinical remission at week 52, as compared with 21.6% assigned to placebo (P
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- 2013
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4. Efficacy of Per-oral Methylene Blue Formulation for Screening Colonoscopy
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Repici, A., Wallace, M.B., East, J.E., Sharma, P., Ramirez, F.C., Bruining, D.H., Young, M., Gatof, D., Canto, M.I., Marcon, N., Cannizzaro, R., Kiesslich, R., Rutter, M., Dekker, E., Siersema, P.D., Spaander, M., Kupcinskas, L., Jonaitis, L., Bisschops, R., Radaelli, F., Bhandari, P., Wilson, A., Early, D., Gupta, N., Vieth, M., Lauwers, G.Y., Rossini, M., Hassan, C., Repici, A., Wallace, M.B., East, J.E., Sharma, P., Ramirez, F.C., Bruining, D.H., Young, M., Gatof, D., Canto, M.I., Marcon, N., Cannizzaro, R., Kiesslich, R., Rutter, M., Dekker, E., Siersema, P.D., Spaander, M., Kupcinskas, L., Jonaitis, L., Bisschops, R., Radaelli, F., Bhandari, P., Wilson, A., Early, D., Gupta, N., Vieth, M., Lauwers, G.Y., Rossini, M., and Hassan, C.
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Contains fulltext : 205156.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access), BACKGROUND & AIMS: Topically applied methylene blue dye chromoendoscopy is effective in improving detection of colorectal neoplasia. When combined with a pH- and time-dependent multimatrix structure, a per-oral methylene blue formulation (MB-MMX) can be delivered directly to the colorectal mucosa. METHODS: We performed a phase 3 study of 1205 patients scheduled for colorectal cancer screening or surveillance colonoscopies (50-75 years old) at 20 sites in Europe and the United States, from December 2013 through October 2016. Patients were randomly assigned to groups given 200 mg MB-MMX, placebo, or 100 mg MB-MMX (ratio of 2:2:1). The 100-mg MB-MMX group was included for masking purposes. MB-MMX and placebo tablets were administered with a 4-L polyethylene glycol-based bowel preparation. The patients then underwent colonoscopy by an experienced endoscopist with centralized double-reading. The primary endpoint was the proportion of patients with 1 adenoma or carcinoma (adenoma detection rate [ADR]). We calculated odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for differences in detection between the 200-mg MB-MMX and placebo groups. False-positive (resection rate for non-neoplastic polyps) and adverse events were assessed as secondary endpoints. RESULTS: The ADR was higher for the MB-MMX group (273 of 485 patients, 56.29%) than the placebo group (229 of 479 patients, 47.81%) (OR 1.46; 95% CI 1.09-1.96). The proportion of patients with nonpolypoid lesions was higher in the MB-MMX group (213 of 485 patients, 43.92%) than the placebo group (168 of 479 patients, 35.07%) (OR 1.66; 95% CI 1.21-2.26). The proportion of patients with adenomas =5 mm was higher in the MB-MMX group (180 of 485 patients, 37.11%) than the placebo group (148 of 479 patients, 30.90%) (OR 1.36; 95% CI 1.01-1.83), but there was no difference between groups in detection of polypoid or larger lesions. The false-positive rate did not differ significantly between groups (83 [23.31%] of 356 patients
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- 2019
5. Vedolizumab as induction and maintenance therapy for ulcerative colitis
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Feagan, Bg, Rutgeerts, P, Sands, Be, Hanauer, S, Colombel, Jf, Sandborn, Wj, Van Assche, G, Axler, J, Kim, Hj, Danese, S, Fox, I, Milch, C, Sankoh, S, Wyant, T, Xu, J, Parikh, A, Bampton P, GEMINI 1 Study G. r. o. u. p., Chung, A, Debinski, H, Florin, T, Hetzel, D, Kronborg, I, Lawrance, I, Leong, R, Macrae, F, Moore, G, Pavli, P, Radford Smith, G, Weltman, M, Haas, T, Reinisch, W, Stockenhuber, F, Vogel, W, De Maeyer, M, De Vos, M, D'Haens, G, Louis, E, Muls, V, Petrov, P, Aumais, G, Bitton, A, Bourdages, R, Bressler, B, Cohen, A, Fedorak, R, Greenberg, G, Jones, J, Kutcher, W, Macintosh, D, Ponich, T, Singh, R, Steinhart, H, Sy, R, Douda, L, Lukas, M, Samek, M, Vyhnalek, P, Woznica, V, Zadorova, Z, Andersen, V, Rannem, T, Staun, M, Maelt, A, Margus, B, Bonaz, B, Coffin, B, Desreumaux, P, Laharie, D, Reimund, Jm, Karaus, M, Pace, A, Ross, M, Schmidt, W, Witthoeft, T, Zeitz, M, Karamanolis, D, Mantzaris, G, Maris, T, Ng, C, Gall, J, Hunyady, B, Szepes, A, Toth, T, Vincze, A, Oddsson, E, Jósefsspktali, Kö, Ahuja, V, Amarapurkar, D, Goenka, M, Habeeb, Ma, Jalihal, U, Kalambe, B, Koshy, A, Kumar, R, Prasad, V, Reddy, N, Sekar, T, Shankar, R, Tantry, V, Ryan, B, Avni, Y, Ben Horin, S, Ardizzone, S, Armuzzi, A, Corazziari, E, Fries, Walter, Kohn, A, Lisova, D, George, Am, Hilmi, In, Bhaskaran, Sk, Soon, Sy, Engels, L, Ponsioen, C, Wallace, I, Wyeth, J, Florholmen, J, Jahnsen, J, Lygren, I, Röseth, A, Ciecko Michalska, I, Gonciarz, M, Huk, J, Jamrozik Kruk, Z, Kondusz Szklarz, M, Paradowski, L, Wiechowska Kozlowska, A, Han, Ds, Hong, Sp, Kim, Js, Kim, Ko, Kim, Yh, Yang, Sk, Alexeeva, O, Bunkova, E, Burnevich, E, Dolgikh, O, Kasherininova, I, Khovaeva, Y, Lakhin, A, Ling, Kl, Bester, F, Coetzer, T, Grundling Hde, K, Jackson, Ld, Spies, P, Wright, Jp, Ziady, C, Garcia Planella, E, Perez Gisbert, J, Rogler, G, Seibold, F, Kao, Aw, Wu, Dc, Atug, O, Kurdas, Oo, Hawthorne, Ab, Lindsay, J, Abreu, M, Aggarwal, A, Bala, N, Becker, S, Behm, B, Braun, R, Cohn, W, Cross, R, Dar, S, Dassopoulos, T, De Villiers, W, Desta, T, Dryden, G, Duvall, A, Farraye, F, Fein, S, Liu, Bf, Gatof, D, Geenen, D, Ginsburg, P, Glover, S, Gopal, V, Hanson, J, Hardi, R, Isaacs, K, Jain, R, Karyotakis, N, Korzenik, J, Koshy, G, Koval, G, Lawitz, E, Lee, S, Loftus, E, Luther, R, Mahadevan, U, Mannon, P, Matsuyama, R, Mcintosh, A, Melmed, G, Mirkin, K, Nichols, M, Oubre, B, Pandak, W, Quadri, A, Quallich, L, Randall, C, Rausher, D, Regueiro, M, Safdi, A, Sands, B, Scherl, E, Schneier, J, Schwartz, D, Sedghi, S, Shafran, I, Siegel, C, Stein, L, Tatum, H, Weinberg, D, Winston, B, Wolf, D, Younes, Z, Jewell, D, Mahon, J, Rothstein, R, Snydman, D, Massaro, J, Clifford, D, Berger, J, Major, E, Provenzale, J, Abstract, Lev M., Feagan, Bg, Rutgeerts, P, Sands, Be, Hanauer, S, Colombel, Jf, Sandborn, Wj, Van Assche, G, Axler, J, Kim, Hj, Danese, S, Fox, I, Milch, C, Sankoh, S, Wyant, T, Xu, J, and Parikh, A
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Integrins ,Placebo ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized ,Drug Administration Schedule ,law.invention ,Vedolizumab ,Maintenance Chemotherapy ,Maintenance therapy ,Randomized controlled trial ,Double-Blind Method ,law ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Glucocorticoids ,Aged ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Induction Chemotherapy ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Ulcerative colitis ,Infliximab ,Surgery ,Clinical trial ,Cohort ,Colitis, Ulcerative ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,Female ,business ,Immunosuppressive Agents ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Gut-selective blockade of lymphocyte trafficking by vedolizumab may constitute effective treatment for ulcerative colitis.We conducted two integrated randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trials of vedolizumab in patients with active disease. In the trial of induction therapy, 374 patients (cohort 1) received vedolizumab (at a dose of 300 mg) or placebo intravenously at weeks 0 and 2, and 521 patients (cohort 2) received open-label vedolizumab at weeks 0 and 2, with disease evaluation at week 6. In the trial of maintenance therapy, patients in either cohort who had a response to vedolizumab at week 6 were randomly assigned to continue receiving vedolizumab every 8 or 4 weeks or to switch to placebo for up to 52 weeks. A response was defined as a reduction in the Mayo Clinic score (range, 0 to 12, with higher scores indicating more active disease) of at least 3 points and a decrease of at least 30% from baseline, with an accompanying decrease in the rectal bleeding subscore of at least 1 point or an absolute rectal bleeding subscore of 0 or 1.Response rates at week 6 were 47.1% and 25.5% among patients in the vedolizumab group and placebo group, respectively (difference with adjustment for stratification factors, 21.7 percentage points; 95% confidence interval [CI], 11.6 to 31.7; P0.001). At week 52, 41.8% of patients who continued to receive vedolizumab every 8 weeks and 44.8% of patients who continued to receive vedolizumab every 4 weeks were in clinical remission (Mayo Clinic score ≤2 and no subscore1), as compared with 15.9% of patients who switched to placebo (adjusted difference, 26.1 percentage points for vedolizumab every 8 weeks vs. placebo [95% CI, 14.9 to 37.2; P0.001] and 29.1 percentage points for vedolizumab every 4 weeks vs. placebo [95% CI, 17.9 to 40.4; P0.001]). The frequency of adverse events was similar in the vedolizumab and placebo groups.Vedolizumab was more effective than placebo as induction and maintenance therapy for ulcerative colitis. (Funded by Millennium Pharmaceuticals; GEMINI 1 ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00783718.).
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- 2013
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6. Vedolizumab as induction and maintenance therapy for Crohn's disease.
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GEMINI 2 Study Group, Bampton, P., Borody, T., Chung, A., Debinski, H., Florin, T., Hetzel, D., Jakobovits, S., Lawrance, I., Leong, R., Macrae, F., Mitchell, B., Moore, G., Pavli, P., Samuel, D., Weltman, M., Haas, T., Reinisch, W., Vogel, W., Baert, F., De Maeyer, M., De Vos, M., Dewit, O., D'Haens, G., Louis, E., Muls, V., Van Assche, G., Krastev, Z., Nikolovska, D., Petrov, P., Petrov, A., Stoinov, S., Tchernev, K., Vasileva, G., Aumais, G., Axler, J., Bailey, R., Bernstein, C., Bitton, A., Bourdages, R., Bressler, B., Cohen, A., Devroede, G., Dhalla, S., Feagan, B., Fedorak, R., Green, D., Greenberg, G., Jones, J., Larkai, E., MacIntosh, D., Panaccione, R., Ponich, T., Singh, R., Sy, R., Wiesinger, H., Albin, A., Douda, L., Horny, I., Lukas, M., Stehlik, J., Stuksa, J., Volfova, M., Vyhnalek, P., Zadorova, Z., Andersen, V., Bendtsen, F., Fallingborg, J., Rannem, T., Maelt, A., Margus, B., Salupere, R., Allez, M., Des Varennes SB., Desreumaux, P., Dupas, JL., Grimaud, JC., Hebuterne, X., Lerebours, E., Picon, L., Zerbib, F., Aldinger, V., Baumgart, D., Buening, C., Dollinger, M., Hoffmann, P., Howaldt, S., Klaus, J., Konturek, JW., Krummenerl, T., Malfertheiner, P., Schmidt, W., Schreiber, S., Seidler, U., Stallmach, A., Stremmel, W., Zeitz, M., Mantzaris, G., Triantafyllou, K., Ng, C., Bene, L., Fazekas, I., Fejes, R., Gall, J., Horvat, G., Hunyady, B., Salamon, A., Toth, T., Tulassay, Z., Varga, E., Varga, M., Varga-Szabo, L., Vincze, A., Oddsson, E., Örvar, K., Ahuja, V., Amarapurkar, D., Chandra, A., Koshy, A., Krishna, P., Ramakrishna, K., Reddy, N., Thorat, V., Patchett, S., Ryan, B., Ben Horin, S., Fishman, S., Lavy, A., Rachmilewitz, D., Ardizzone, S., Corazziari, E., Danese, S., Fries, W., Gasbarrini, A., Kohn, A., Sturniolo, GC., Danilans, A., George, AM., Hilmi, IN., Engels, LG., Ponsioen, CY., van der Woude CJ., Gearry, R., Haines, M., Schultz, M., Wallace, I., Wyeth, J., Florholmen, J., Jahnsen, J., Lygren, I., Röseth, A., Ciecko-Michalska, I., Gonciarz, M., Horynski, M., Huk, J., Jamrozik-Kruk, Z., Janke, A., Klupinska, G., Marecik, J., Paradowski, L., Rudzinski, J., Rydzewska, G., Han, DS., Hong, SP., Kim, HJ., Kim, JS., Kim, KO., Kim, YH., Yang, SK., Gheorghe, LS., Voiosu, RM., Alexeeva, O., Baranovsky, A., Bunkova, E., Burnevich, E., Dolgikh, O., Grinevich, V., Lakhin, A., Tarabar, D., Ling, KL., Bunganic, I., Cernok, S., Gregus, M., Coetzer, T., Grundling, H., Moola, SA., Wright, JP., Ziady, C., Bermejo, F., Calvet, X., Herrerias, JM., Perez Calle JL., Perez Gisbert, J., Hertervig, E., Karlen, P., Michetti, P., Rogler, G., Seibold, F., Wu, DC., Atug, O., Kurdas, OO., Datsenko, O., Dorofyeyev, A., Dudar, L., Golovchenko, O., Klyarits'ka, I., Skrypnyk, I., Hawthorne, AB., Middleton, S., Abreu, M., Bala, N., Becker, S., Behm, B., Braun, R., Bukhari, M., Chen, S., Coates, A., Dar, S., Dassopoulos, T., De Villiers, W., Desautels, S., Desta, T., Dimitroff, J., Dryden, G., Duvall, A., Farraye, F., Fein, S., Liu, BF., Gatof, D., Geenen, D., Ginsburg, P., Glombicki, A., Glover, S., Gordon, G., Grisolano, S., Hanauer, S., Hanson, J., Hardi, R., Hoffman, B., Isaacs, K., Kim, C., Koval, G., Lashner, B., Lawitz, E., Lee, S., Leman, B., Levine, J., Loftus, E., Mahadevan, U., Mannon, P., Marcet, J., Matsuyama, R., Matusow, G., McCabe, R., Mirkin, K., Murphy, M., Mushahwar, A., Mutlu, E., Nagrani, M., Nguyen, D., Nichols, M., Nieves Ramirez, A., Oubre, B., Pace, S., Pandak, W., Perera, L., Quadri, A., Quallich, L., Rajapakse, R., Randall, C., Regueiro, M., Safdi, A., Sandborn, W., Sands, B., Saubermann, L., Scherl, E., Schwartz, D., Sedghi, S., Shafran, I., Shepard, R., Siegel, C., Stein, L., Tatum, H., Triebling, A., Vasudeva, R., Winston, B., Wolf, D., Younes, Z., Feagan, BG., Colombel, JF., Rutgeerts, P., Sandborn, WJ., Sands, BE., Jewell, D., Mahon, J., Rothstein, R., Snydman, D., Massaro, J., Clifford, D., Berger, J., Major, E., Provenzale, J., Lev, M., Sandborn, W.J., Feagan, B.G., Colombel, J.F., Sands, B.E., Fedorak, R.N., Fox, I., Rosario, M., Sankoh, S., Xu, J., Stephens, K., Milch, C., Parikh, A., GEMINI 2 Study Group, Bampton, P., Borody, T., Chung, A., Debinski, H., Florin, T., Hetzel, D., Jakobovits, S., Lawrance, I., Leong, R., Macrae, F., Mitchell, B., Moore, G., Pavli, P., Samuel, D., Weltman, M., Haas, T., Reinisch, W., Vogel, W., Baert, F., De Maeyer, M., De Vos, M., Dewit, O., D'Haens, G., Louis, E., Muls, V., Van Assche, G., Krastev, Z., Nikolovska, D., Petrov, P., Petrov, A., Stoinov, S., Tchernev, K., Vasileva, G., Aumais, G., Axler, J., Bailey, R., Bernstein, C., Bitton, A., Bourdages, R., Bressler, B., Cohen, A., Devroede, G., Dhalla, S., Feagan, B., Fedorak, R., Green, D., Greenberg, G., Jones, J., Larkai, E., MacIntosh, D., Panaccione, R., Ponich, T., Singh, R., Sy, R., Wiesinger, H., Albin, A., Douda, L., Horny, I., Lukas, M., Stehlik, J., Stuksa, J., Volfova, M., Vyhnalek, P., Zadorova, Z., Andersen, V., Bendtsen, F., Fallingborg, J., Rannem, T., Maelt, A., Margus, B., Salupere, R., Allez, M., Des Varennes SB., Desreumaux, P., Dupas, JL., Grimaud, JC., Hebuterne, X., Lerebours, E., Picon, L., Zerbib, F., Aldinger, V., Baumgart, D., Buening, C., Dollinger, M., Hoffmann, P., Howaldt, S., Klaus, J., Konturek, JW., Krummenerl, T., Malfertheiner, P., Schmidt, W., Schreiber, S., Seidler, U., Stallmach, A., Stremmel, W., Zeitz, M., Mantzaris, G., Triantafyllou, K., Ng, C., Bene, L., Fazekas, I., Fejes, R., Gall, J., Horvat, G., Hunyady, B., Salamon, A., Toth, T., Tulassay, Z., Varga, E., Varga, M., Varga-Szabo, L., Vincze, A., Oddsson, E., Örvar, K., Ahuja, V., Amarapurkar, D., Chandra, A., Koshy, A., Krishna, P., Ramakrishna, K., Reddy, N., Thorat, V., Patchett, S., Ryan, B., Ben Horin, S., Fishman, S., Lavy, A., Rachmilewitz, D., Ardizzone, S., Corazziari, E., Danese, S., Fries, W., Gasbarrini, A., Kohn, A., Sturniolo, GC., Danilans, A., George, AM., Hilmi, IN., Engels, LG., Ponsioen, CY., van der Woude CJ., Gearry, R., Haines, M., Schultz, M., Wallace, I., Wyeth, J., Florholmen, J., Jahnsen, J., Lygren, I., Röseth, A., Ciecko-Michalska, I., Gonciarz, M., Horynski, M., Huk, J., Jamrozik-Kruk, Z., Janke, A., Klupinska, G., Marecik, J., Paradowski, L., Rudzinski, J., Rydzewska, G., Han, DS., Hong, SP., Kim, HJ., Kim, JS., Kim, KO., Kim, YH., Yang, SK., Gheorghe, LS., Voiosu, RM., Alexeeva, O., Baranovsky, A., Bunkova, E., Burnevich, E., Dolgikh, O., Grinevich, V., Lakhin, A., Tarabar, D., Ling, KL., Bunganic, I., Cernok, S., Gregus, M., Coetzer, T., Grundling, H., Moola, SA., Wright, JP., Ziady, C., Bermejo, F., Calvet, X., Herrerias, JM., Perez Calle JL., Perez Gisbert, J., Hertervig, E., Karlen, P., Michetti, P., Rogler, G., Seibold, F., Wu, DC., Atug, O., Kurdas, OO., Datsenko, O., Dorofyeyev, A., Dudar, L., Golovchenko, O., Klyarits'ka, I., Skrypnyk, I., Hawthorne, AB., Middleton, S., Abreu, M., Bala, N., Becker, S., Behm, B., Braun, R., Bukhari, M., Chen, S., Coates, A., Dar, S., Dassopoulos, T., De Villiers, W., Desautels, S., Desta, T., Dimitroff, J., Dryden, G., Duvall, A., Farraye, F., Fein, S., Liu, BF., Gatof, D., Geenen, D., Ginsburg, P., Glombicki, A., Glover, S., Gordon, G., Grisolano, S., Hanauer, S., Hanson, J., Hardi, R., Hoffman, B., Isaacs, K., Kim, C., Koval, G., Lashner, B., Lawitz, E., Lee, S., Leman, B., Levine, J., Loftus, E., Mahadevan, U., Mannon, P., Marcet, J., Matsuyama, R., Matusow, G., McCabe, R., Mirkin, K., Murphy, M., Mushahwar, A., Mutlu, E., Nagrani, M., Nguyen, D., Nichols, M., Nieves Ramirez, A., Oubre, B., Pace, S., Pandak, W., Perera, L., Quadri, A., Quallich, L., Rajapakse, R., Randall, C., Regueiro, M., Safdi, A., Sandborn, W., Sands, B., Saubermann, L., Scherl, E., Schwartz, D., Sedghi, S., Shafran, I., Shepard, R., Siegel, C., Stein, L., Tatum, H., Triebling, A., Vasudeva, R., Winston, B., Wolf, D., Younes, Z., Feagan, BG., Colombel, JF., Rutgeerts, P., Sandborn, WJ., Sands, BE., Jewell, D., Mahon, J., Rothstein, R., Snydman, D., Massaro, J., Clifford, D., Berger, J., Major, E., Provenzale, J., Lev, M., Sandborn, W.J., Feagan, B.G., Colombel, J.F., Sands, B.E., Fedorak, R.N., Fox, I., Rosario, M., Sankoh, S., Xu, J., Stephens, K., Milch, C., and Parikh, A.
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: The efficacy of vedolizumab, an α4β7 integrin antibody, in Crohn's disease is unknown. METHODS: In an integrated study with separate induction and maintenance trials, we assessed intravenous vedolizumab therapy (300 mg) in adults with active Crohn's disease. In the induction trial, 368 patients were randomly assigned to receive vedolizumab or placebo at weeks 0 and 2 (cohort 1), and 747 patients received open-label vedolizumab at weeks 0 and 2 (cohort 2); disease status was assessed at week 6. In the maintenance trial, 461 patients who had had a response to vedolizumab were randomly assigned to receive placebo or vedolizumab every 8 or 4 weeks until week 52. RESULTS: At week 6, a total of 14.5% of the patients in cohort 1 who received vedolizumab and 6.8% who received placebo were in clinical remission (i.e., had a score on the Crohn's Disease Activity Index [CDAI] of ≤150, with scores ranging from 0 to approximately 600 and higher scores indicating greater disease activity) (P=0.02); a total of 31.4% and 25.7% of the patients, respectively, had a CDAI-100 response (≥100-point decrease in the CDAI score) (P=0.23). Among patients in cohorts 1 and 2 who had a response to induction therapy, 39.0% and 36.4% of those assigned to vedolizumab every 8 weeks and every 4 weeks, respectively, were in clinical remission at week 52, as compared with 21.6% assigned to placebo (P<0.001 and P=0.004 for the two vedolizumab groups, respectively, vs. placebo). Antibodies against vedolizumab developed in 4.0% of the patients. Nasopharyngitis occurred more frequently, and headache and abdominal pain less frequently, in patients receiving vedolizumab than in patients receiving placebo. Vedolizumab, as compared with placebo, was associated with a higher rate of serious adverse events (24.4% vs. 15.3%), infections (44.1% vs. 40.2%), and serious infections (5.5% vs. 3.0%). CONCLUSIONS: Vedolizumab-treated patients with active Crohn's disease were more likely than patients rec
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- 2013
7. Efficacy of Per-oral Methylene Blue Formulation for Screening Colonoscopy.
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Repici A, Wallace MB, East JE, Sharma P, Ramirez FC, Bruining DH, Young M, Gatof D, Irene Mimi Canto M, Marcon N, Cannizzaro R, Kiesslich R, Rutter M, Dekker E, Siersema PD, Spaander M, Kupcinskas L, Jonaitis L, Bisschops R, Radaelli F, Bhandari P, Wilson A, Early D, Gupta N, Vieth M, Lauwers GY, Rossini M, and Hassan C
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- Administration, Oral, Aged, Double-Blind Method, Europe, Female, Humans, Internationality, Male, Middle Aged, Sensitivity and Specificity, United States, Colonoscopy methods, Colorectal Neoplasms diagnosis, Early Detection of Cancer methods, Image Enhancement methods, Methylene Blue administration & dosage
- Abstract
Background & Aims: Topically applied methylene blue dye chromoendoscopy is effective in improving detection of colorectal neoplasia. When combined with a pH- and time-dependent multimatrix structure, a per-oral methylene blue formulation (MB-MMX) can be delivered directly to the colorectal mucosa., Methods: We performed a phase 3 study of 1205 patients scheduled for colorectal cancer screening or surveillance colonoscopies (50-75 years old) at 20 sites in Europe and the United States, from December 2013 through October 2016. Patients were randomly assigned to groups given 200 mg MB-MMX, placebo, or 100 mg MB-MMX (ratio of 2:2:1). The 100-mg MB-MMX group was included for masking purposes. MB-MMX and placebo tablets were administered with a 4-L polyethylene glycol-based bowel preparation. The patients then underwent colonoscopy by an experienced endoscopist with centralized double-reading. The primary endpoint was the proportion of patients with 1 adenoma or carcinoma (adenoma detection rate [ADR]). We calculated odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for differences in detection between the 200-mg MB-MMX and placebo groups. False-positive (resection rate for non-neoplastic polyps) and adverse events were assessed as secondary endpoints., Results: The ADR was higher for the MB-MMX group (273 of 485 patients, 56.29%) than the placebo group (229 of 479 patients, 47.81%) (OR 1.46; 95% CI 1.09-1.96). The proportion of patients with nonpolypoid lesions was higher in the MB-MMX group (213 of 485 patients, 43.92%) than the placebo group (168 of 479 patients, 35.07%) (OR 1.66; 95% CI 1.21-2.26). The proportion of patients with adenomas ≤5 mm was higher in the MB-MMX group (180 of 485 patients, 37.11%) than the placebo group (148 of 479 patients, 30.90%) (OR 1.36; 95% CI 1.01-1.83), but there was no difference between groups in detection of polypoid or larger lesions. The false-positive rate did not differ significantly between groups (83 [23.31%] of 356 patients with non-neoplastic lesions in the MB-MMX vs 97 [29.75%] of 326 patients with non-neoplastic lesions in the placebo group). Overall, 0.7% of patients had severe adverse events but there was no significant difference between groups., Conclusions: In a phase 3 trial of patients undergoing screening or surveillance colonoscopies, we found MB-MMX led to an absolute 8.5% increase in ADR, compared with placebo, without increasing the removal of non-neoplastic lesions. Clinicaltrials.gov no: NCT01694966., (Copyright © 2019 AGA Institute. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2019
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8. The validity of breath collection bags method in detecting Helicobacter pylori using the novel BreathID ® Hp Lab System : a multicenter clinical study in 257 subjects.
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Richter V, Gonzalez JO, Hazan S, Gottlieb G, Friedenberg K, Gatof D, Ganeshappa R, Delgado JS, Abramowitz D, Hardi R, Coates A, Haq M, Mehta N, Jones BA, Moss SF, and Shirin H
- Abstract
Background and Aim: The BreathID
® Hp urea breath test provides several advantages over other13 C breath analyzers for the detection of Helicobacter pylori . We evaluated the sensitivity and specificity of a new BreathID® Hp Lab System (Exalenz Bioscience Ltd, Israel), a13 C-urea breath test system using breath sampling bags that facilitates multiple testing in a multicenter international clinical study., Methods: A total of 257 subjects with evaluable results for urea breath test, rapid urease test, and histology were enrolled into two study groups: 189 naïve subjects were included in the pre-therapy group, and 68 subjects comprised the post-eradication therapy group. Analytical studies were conducted to evaluate the stability, reproducibility, and repeatability of the13 C-urea breath test results using a delta over baseline cut-off value of 5., Results: Among the pre-therapy subjects evaluated with the composite results from the rapid urease test and histology/immunohistochemistry, 176 results matched those of the urea breath test, resulting in an overall agreement of 98.3% with a sensitivity of 100% and specificity of 97.9%. In the post-eradication therapy cohort, the overall agreement between the urea breath test and the biopsy diagnosis was 98.5%; the sensitivity of the urea breath test in this cohort was 92.3% and the specificity was 100%. There was uniformly high overall reproducibility (99.48%) of the test results over different batches of breath sample bags, when analyzed on different days and under different storage conditions, showing stability of the breath samples in the breath collection bags., Conclusion: The BreathID® Hp Lab System is a highly accurate and dependable method for the diagnosis of H. pylori infection., Competing Interests: Conflict of interest statement: The authors declared the following potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: H.S. has received grants and stock options from Exalenz Bioscience Ltd. None of other authors report conflicts.- Published
- 2019
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9. Primary squamous cell carcinoma of the bile duct diagnosed by transpapillary cholangioscopy: case report and review.
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Gatof D, Chen YK, and Shah RJ
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- Aged, Bile Duct Neoplasms pathology, Carcinoma, Squamous Cell pathology, Female, Fluoroscopy, Humans, Bile Duct Neoplasms diagnosis, Bile Ducts, Extrahepatic pathology, Carcinoma, Squamous Cell diagnosis, Endoscopy, Digestive System
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- 2004
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10. Vesicular exocytosis contributes to volume-sensitive ATP release in biliary cells.
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Gatof D, Kilic G, and Fitz JG
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- Adenocarcinoma metabolism, Cell Line, Tumor, Cell Membrane metabolism, Cell Size, Cyclic AMP physiology, Enzyme Activators pharmacology, Enzyme Inhibitors pharmacology, Epithelial Cells drug effects, Epithelial Cells metabolism, Exocytosis drug effects, Fluorescence, Gallbladder drug effects, Gallbladder Neoplasms metabolism, Humans, Osmolar Concentration, Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinases physiology, Phosphoinositide-3 Kinase Inhibitors, Protein Kinase C antagonists & inhibitors, Protein Kinase C physiology, Adenosine Triphosphate metabolism, Exocytosis physiology, Gallbladder cytology, Gallbladder metabolism
- Abstract
Extracellular ATP is a potent autocrine/paracrine signal that regulates a broad range of liver functions through activation of purinergic receptors. In biliary epithelium, increases in cell volume stimulate ATP release through a phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3-kinase)-dependent mechanism. Because PI3-kinase also regulates vesicular exocytosis, the purpose of these studies was to determine whether volume-stimulated vesicular exocytosis contributes to cellular ATP release. In a human cholangiocarcinoma cell line, exocytosis was measured by using the plasma membrane marker FM1-43, whereas ATP release was assessed by using a luciferase-luciferin assay. Under basal conditions, cholangiocytes exhibited constitutive exocytosis at a rate of 1.6%/min, and low levels of extracellular ATP were detected at 48.2 arbitrary light units. Increases in cholangiocyte cell volume induced by hypotonic exposure resulted in a 10-fold increase in the rate of exocytosis and a robust 35-fold increase in ATP release. Both vesicular exocytosis and ATP release were proportional to cell volume, and both exhibited similar regulatory properties including: 1) dependence on intact PI3-kinase, 2) attenuation by inhibition of PKC, and 3) potentiation by activation of PKC before hypotonic exposure. These findings demonstrate that increases in cholangiocyte cell volume stimulate ATP release and vesicular exocytosis through similar regulatory paradigms. Functional interactions among cell volume, PKC, and PI3-kinase modulate exocytosis, thereby regulating ATP release and purinergic signaling in cholangiocytes. It is hypothesized that PKC is involved in the recruitment of a volume-sensitive vesicular pool to a readily releasable state.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Primary prevention of colorectal cancer: diet and drugs.
- Author
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Gatof D and Ahnen D
- Subjects
- Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal therapeutic use, Chemoprevention, Diet, Environment, Health Behavior, Humans, Risk Assessment, Colorectal Neoplasms prevention & control, Primary Prevention methods
- Abstract
Primary prevention of colonic adenomas and cancer through dietary interventions or chemoprevention has great appeal. This article discusses primary prevention goals and promising nutritional or chemopreventive strategies. There is substantial observational evidence that diets high in total calories and fat and or low in fruits and vegetables or total fiber as well as low levels of physical activity are related to the risk of colonic neoplasia. Similar observational data indicate that diets high in specific nutrients such as antioxidant vitamins or calcium may be protective. The article describes some of the newer chemopreventive agents and reviews the data linking diet and lifestyle to colorectal cancer risk, focusing on interventions that have also been studied in prospective clinical trials. Finally the evidence supporting the role of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs for the chemoprevention of CRC is reviewed and the status of several other promising newer agents that are entering human trials is summarized.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Bilateral thumb burns leading to the diagnosis of crack lung.
- Author
-
Gatof D and Albert RK
- Subjects
- Administration, Inhalation, Adult, Diagnosis, Differential, Female, Humans, Lung Diseases diagnosis, Burns etiology, Cocaine-Related Disorders diagnosis, Crack Cocaine adverse effects, Lung Diseases chemically induced, Thumb injuries
- Abstract
Bilateral thumb burns on a young woman admitted to the hospital with the diagnosis of community-acquired pneumonia led us to consider the diagnosis of crack lung despite the fact that the woman denied cocaine use. Cocaine was found on a urine toxicology study, and its use was subsequently confirmed by history. The patient was treated for crack lung with complete resolution of her symptoms and radiographic findings. Inspection of the hands for burns consistent with handling cocaine pipes should prompt a consideration of crack lung in patients with pulmonary infiltrates.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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