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Randomized Trial of Ciprofloxacin Doxycycline and Hydroxychloroquine Versus Budesonide in Active Crohn's Disease

Authors :
Sreedhar Subramanian
Jonathan M. Rhodes
Tariq Iqbal
Paul K Flanagan
Kate Martin
John C. Mansfield
Chris Probert
Miles Parkes
Helen Dallal
Kate Culshaw
Jeffrey Butterworth
Graham W. Horgan
Ailsa Hart
Rhodes, Jonathan M [0000-0002-1302-260X]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Source :
Digestive Diseases and Sciences
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Increased mucosa-associated E. coli are present in Crohn's disease, but their role in pathogenesis is uncertain. AIMS: To assess efficacy and safety of an antibiotic/hydroxychloroquine combination effective against E. coli inside macrophages. METHODS: Adults with moderately active disease (CDAI > 220-450 plus C reactive protein ≥ 5 mg/l and/or fecal calprotectin > 250 μg/g) were randomized to receive (open-label) oral budesonide (Entocort CR 9 mg/day 8 weeks, 6 mg/day 2 weeks, 3 mg/day 2 weeks) or oral ciprofloxacin 500 mg bd, doxycycline 100 mg bd, hydroxychloroquine 200 mg tds for 4 weeks, followed by doxycycline 100 mg bd and hydroxychloroquine 200 mg tds for 20 weeks. Primary endpoints were remission (CDAI ≤ 150) at 10 weeks, remission maintained to 24 weeks, and remission maintained to 52 weeks. Patients not responding (CDAI fall by > 70) by 10 weeks were invited to crossover onto the alternative therapy. RESULTS: Fifty-nine patients were recruited across 8 sites. Including crossover, 39 patients received antibiotics/hydroxychloroquine and 39 received budesonide. At 10 weeks, 24 weeks, and 52 weeks on initial therapy, only 2/27, 2/27, and 1/27 were in remission on antibiotics/hydroxychloroquine compared with 8/32, 1/32, and 1/32 on budesonide (P = 0.092 at 10 weeks). Withdrawals by 10 weeks due to adverse events were seen in 15 receiving antibiotics/hydroxychloroquine and 6 budesonide. Results including crossover were more promising with 9/24 patients receiving antibiotics/hydroxychloroquine per protocol in remission by 24 weeks. No correlation was seen between response to antibiotics/hydroxychloroquine and ASCA/OmpC antibody status or disease location. CONCLUSION: Overall results with this antibiotic/hydroxychloroquine combination were unimpressive, but long-term remission is seen in some patients and justifies further study.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Digestive Diseases and Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9384a2ae721dd4e630c48306c82d43d7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.17863/cam.63830