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Vedolizumab as induction and maintenance therapy for ulcerative colitis

Authors :
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
Parikh, A
Source :
Feagan, B G, Rutgeerts, P, Sands, B E, Hanauer, S, Colombel, J-F, Sandborn, W J, Van Assche, G, Axler, J, Kim, H-J, Danese, S, Fox, I, Milch, C, Sankoh, S, Wyant, T, Xu, J, Parikh, A, GEMINI 1 Study Group & Andersen, V 2013, ' Vedolizumab as induction and maintenance therapy for ulcerative colitis ', The New England Journal of Medicine, vol. 369, no. 8, pp. 699-710 . https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa1215734
Publication Year :
2013

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.).

Details

ISSN :
15334406
Volume :
369
Issue :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The New England journal of medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5f535f6a4645de35bab1c956ec0c8158