BMJ Open (Jul 2024)

Switching from Dose-Intensified intravenous to SubCutaneoUS infliximab in Inflammatory Bowel Disease (DISCUS-IBD): protocol for a multicentre randomised controlled trial

  • Jonathan P Segal,
  • Mayur Garg,
  • Miles P Sparrow,
  • Gareth J Walker,
  • Ashish Srinivasan,
  • Peter De Cruz,
  • Desmond Chee,
  • Alex Boussioutas,
  • Robert V Bryant,
  • Georgina Hold,
  • Gregory T Moore,
  • Susan J Connor,
  • Robert D Little,
  • Mark G Ward,
  • Jo McKenzie,
  • Patrick Hilley,
  • Robert B Gilmore,
  • Manjeet Sandhu,
  • Daniel Saitta,
  • Elizabeth Chow,
  • Lena Thin,
  • Kate Lynch,
  • Jane Andrews,
  • Yoon K An,
  • Emily K Wright

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2023-081787
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 7

Abstract

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Introduction A substantial proportion of patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) on intravenous infliximab require dose intensification. Accessing additional intravenous infliximab is labour-intensive and expensive, depending on insurance and pharmaceutical reimbursement. Observational data suggest that subcutaneous infliximab may offer a convenient and safe alternative to maintain disease remission in patients requiring dose-intensified infliximab. A prospective, controlled trial is required to confirm that subcutaneous infliximab is as effective as dose-intensified intravenous infliximab, to identify predictors of disease flare and to establish the role of subcutaneous infliximab therapeutic drug monitoring.Methods and analysis The DISCUS-IBD trial is an investigator-initiated, prospective, multicentre, randomised, open-label non-inferiority study comparing the rate of disease flares in participants randomised to continue dose-intensified intravenous infliximab to those switched to subcutaneous infliximab after 48 weeks. Participants are adult patients with IBD in sustained corticosteroid-free remission on any regimen of dose-intensified infliximab up to a maximum of 10 mg/kg 4-weekly intravenously. Participants allocated to intravenous infliximab will continue infliximab at the same dose-intensified regimen they were receiving at study enrolment. Subcutaneous infliximab dosing will be stratified by prior intravenous infliximab dosing. Clinical (Harvey-Bradshaw Index, partial Mayo score), biochemical (C reactive protein, faecal calprotectin), pharmacokinetic (drug-level±antidrug antibodies) and qualitative data are collected 12-weekly until study conclusion at week 48. 13 sites across Australia will participate in recruitment to reach a calculated sample size of 120 participants.Ethics and dissemination Multisite ethics approval was obtained from the Health District Human Research Ethics Committee (HREC) at The Alfred Hospital under a National Mutual Acceptance (NMA) agreement (HREC/90559/Alfred-2022; Local Reference: Project 618/22, version 1.6, 2 March 2023). Findings will be reported at national and international gastroenterology meetings and published in peer-reviewed journals. DISCUS-IBD was prospectively registered with the Australian and New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (ANZCTR) prior to commencing recruitment.Trial registration number ACTRN12622001458729.