Biomedicines (Oct 2022)

Early Clinical Remission Is a Predictor of Long-Term Remission with the Use of Vedolizumab for Ulcerative Colitis

  • Keiichi Haga,
  • Tomoyoshi Shibuya,
  • Taro Osada,
  • Shunsuke Sato,
  • Yuka Fukuo,
  • Osamu Kobayashi,
  • Toshio Yamada,
  • Daisuke Asaoka,
  • Kentaro Ito,
  • Kei Nomura,
  • Mayuko Haraikawa,
  • Osamu Nomura,
  • Hirofumi Fukushima,
  • Takashi Murakami,
  • Dai Ishikawa,
  • Mariko Hojo,
  • Akihito Nagahara

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines10102526
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 10
p. 2526

Abstract

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Vedolizumab (VDZ) is an α4β7 integrin-antibody used to manage refractory ulcerative colitis (UC). This retrospective multicenter study aimed to identify predictors of efficacy or the time points when evaluation of VDZ therapy for UC would be most useful. We compiled data on 87 patients with moderate to severe active UC that was treated with VDZ. Overall clinical remission (CR) rates at 6 weeks and 52 weeks after VDZ administration were 44.4% (bio-naïve 44.2%, bio-failure 44.8%) and 52.8% (bio-naïve 53.5%, bio-failure 51.7%) respectively. Also, 83.3% (bio-naïve 81.3%, bio-failure 85.7%) of patients achieved mucosal healing at week 52. Among patients with a CR at week 52, 73.3% had a CR at week 6. In contrast, of patients who discontinued VDZ, 82.4% had not reached a CR at week 6. Our study demonstrated that VDZ was effective in a large percentage of UC patients, with a high mucosal healing rate even after prior biological exposures. This suggests that VDZ can be a treatment option even in bio-failure cases. Additionally, it was considered that early CR can predict long-term remission and that week 6 can be a helpful evaluation point for treatment decisions when using VDZ for UC.

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