Efficacy of ustekinumab versus advanced therapies for the treatment of moderately to severely active ulcerative colitis: a systematic review and network meta-analysis.

Categoria Systematic review
GiornaleCurrent medical research and opinion
Year 2020

Questo articolo contiene 17 Primary studies 17 Primary studies (17 references)

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Objective

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To compare the relative efficacy of ustekinumab (UST) versus other therapies for 1-year response and remission rates in patients with moderate-severe UC. Methods

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Randomised controlled trials reporting induction and maintenance efficacy of anti-TNFs (infliximab [IFX], adalimumab [ADA], golimumab [GOL]), vedolizumab (VDZ), tofacitinib (TOF) or UST were identified through a systematic literature review. Analyses were conducted for clinical response, clinical remission and endoscopic-mucosal healing for populations with and without failure of prior biologics (non-biologic failure, NBF; biologic failure, BF). Maintenance data from trials with re-randomised response designs were re-calculated to correspond to treat-through arms. Bayesian network meta-analyses (NMA) were conducted to obtain posterior distribution probabilities for UST to perform better than comparators. Results

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Six trials included NBF patients and four included BF patients. In NBF patients, UST as a 1-year regimen showed higher probabilities of clinical response, remission and endoscopic-mucosal healing versus all treatments: Bayesian probabilities of UST being better than active therapies ranged from 91% (VDZ) to 100% (ADA) for response; 82% (VDZ) to 99% (ADA) for remission and 82% (IFX) to 100% (ADA and GOL) for endoscopic-mucosal healing. In BF patients, UST was the most effective treatment (Q8W dose); however, effect sizes were smaller than in the NBF population. Conclusions

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Results indicate a higher likelihood of response, remission and endoscopic-mucosal healing at 1 year with UST versus comparators in the NBF population. In BF patients, a higher likelihood of response to UST versus most comparators was also observed, although results were more uncertain.
Epistemonikos ID: 4f1c36963821880744749545d7d4919fe0711346
First added on: Jan 23, 2020