Inflammatory Intestinal Diseases (Oct 2023)

Real-World Data on Short-Term and Long-Term Treatment Results of Ustekinumab in Patients with Steroid-Resistant/Dependent Ulcerative Colitis

  • Yoriaki Komeda,
  • George Tribonias,
  • Masashi Kono,
  • Kohei Handa,
  • Shunsuke Omoto,
  • Mamoru Takenaka,
  • Satoru Hagiwara,
  • Naoko Tsuji,
  • Naoshi Nishida,
  • Hiroshi Kashida,
  • Masatoshi Kudo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1159/000534457

Abstract

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Introduction: Ustekinumab is an IgG1 kappa monoclonal antibody directed against the common p40 subunit of interleukin-12 and interleukin-23, which activate Th1- and Th17-mediated immune responses, respectively. It has proven efficacy for the treatment of moderate to severe ulcerative colitis (UC) in the UNIFI Phase III clinical trial; however, data on its efficacy in the real world is limited. In this study, we aimed to assess the real-world efficacy of ustekinumab. Methods: This observational study included 30 patients with UC who received ustekinumab from April 2020 to April 2022. We examined demographic information, disease type and activity (Mayo score, partial Mayo score [PMS]), use of biologics, concomitant use of predonisolone (PSL), 8-week ustekinumab clinical response rate, remission induction rate, 44- and 152-week remission maintenance rate, continuation rate, and 44-week steroid-free remission rate. The primary outcomes were the short- and long-term efficacy of ustekinumab. Results: Included patients (53% women; mean age: 41.2 years [16–80 years]) had an average disease duration of 86 weeks. Mayo’s score (median) was 7.4 and the PMS was 5.4. Two (7%), 24 (80%), and four (13%) patients had a Mayo endoscopic sub-score (MES) of MES1, MES2, and MES3, respectively. The median serum CRP was 1.0 mg/dL. Five patients had no history of biotherapy (naive), while 8 and 17 had a history of one and two or more biologic agents, respectively. Eight patients were PSL-resistant and 22 were PSL-dependent. The 8-week clinical response rate was 73%, and the clinical remission induction rate was 70%. The remission maintenance rates at 44 and 152 weeks were 67% and 63%, respectively. The ustekinumab retention rate was 67% (86-week mean follow-up period). Regarding biologic failure cases, the clinical response rate in the failure group with up to one biologic agent (including naive cases) was 84.6%, which was higher than the 58.0% rate in the failure group with two or more biologic agents (p=0.06). Steroid-free remission rates at 44 and 152 weeks were 63% each. In the logistic regression analysis parameters for discontinuation of ustekinumab, only PMS remained significant after multivariate analysis (p=0.018). Conclusion: Our study showed short-term and long-term ustekinumab effectiveness, especially with comparative low disease activity.