Journal of Clinical Medicine (Jul 2023)

Factors Associated with Response to Systemic Corticosteroids in Active Ulcerative Colitis: Results from a Prospective, Multicenter Trial

  • Andreas Blesl,
  • Andrea Borenich,
  • Hans Peter Gröchenig,
  • Gottfried Novacek,
  • Christian Primas,
  • Walter Reinisch,
  • Maximilian Kutschera,
  • Constanze Illiasch,
  • Barbara Hennlich,
  • Pius Steiner,
  • Robert Koch,
  • Wolfgang Tillinger,
  • Thomas Haas,
  • Gerhard Reicht,
  • Andreas Mayer,
  • Othmar Ludwiczek,
  • Wolfgang Miehsler,
  • Karin Steidl,
  • Lukas Binder,
  • Franziska Baumann-Durchschein,
  • Stefan Fürst,
  • Simon Reider,
  • Christina Watschinger,
  • Heimo Wenzl,
  • Alexander Moschen,
  • Andrea Berghold,
  • Christoph Högenauer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12144853
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 14
p. 4853

Abstract

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Background: Among patients with ulcerative colitis, 30–50% receive corticosteroids within the first five years after diagnosis. We aimed to reconsider their effectiveness in the context of the biologic era. Methods: In this prospective, multicenter study, patients with active ulcerative colitis (Lichtiger score ≥ 4) were eligible if initiating systemic corticosteroids. The primary endpoint was clinical response (decrease in the Lichtiger score of ≥50%) at week 4. Secondary endpoints included combined response defined as clinical response and any reduction in elevated biomarkers (CRP and/or calprotectin). Steroid dependence was assessed after three months. Results: A total of 103 patients were included. Clinical response was achieved by 73% of patients, and combined response by 68%. A total of 15% of patients were steroid-dependent. Activity of colitis did not influence short-term response to treatment but increased the risk for steroid dependence. Biologic-naïve patients responded better than biologic-experienced patients. Past smoking history (OR 5.38 [1.71, 20.1], p = 0.003), hemoglobin levels (OR 0.76 [0.57, 0.99] for higher levels, p = 0.045), and biologic experience (OR 3.30 [1.08, 10.6], p = 0.036) were independently associated with nonresponse. Conclusion: Disease activity was not associated with short-term response to systemic corticosteroids but was associated with steroid dependence in patients with active ulcerative colitis. Exposure to biologics negatively affects response rates.

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