Tofacitinib Achieves Symptomatic Improvement within 3 Days in Moderately to Severely Active Ulcerative Colitis, Regardless of Prior Tumour Necrosis Factor Inhibitor Treatment Status: Results from Octave Induction 1 & 2

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Categoria Primary study
GiornaleGastroenterology
Year 2018
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Background: Tofacitinib is an oral, small molecule Janus kinase inhibitor that is being investigated for ulcerative colitis (UC). We evaluated the timing of onset of symptomatic improvement in a post-hoc analysis of patient-reported diary data and evaluated treatment effect in patients with and without prior failure of tumor necrosis factor inhibitor therapy. Methods: OCTAVE Induction 1 & 2 (NCT01465763; NCT01458951) were identical, randomized, placebo-controlled Phase 3 trials in adult patients with moderately to severely active UC who had failed or were intolerant to steroids, immunomodulators, or tumor necrosis factor inhibitors. Patients received placebo (N=234) or tofacitinib 10 mg twice daily (N=905) for 8 weeks. Pooled data for OCTAVE Induction 1 & 2 are presented. During the study, patients recorded their number of bowel movements per day, and the presence and a description of any blood in the stools. Binary endpoints based on Mayo stool frequency and rectal bleeding subscores were compared using stratified Cochran-Mantel-Haenszel chi-square test, based on observed data. Subgroup analyses were conducted by prior tumor necrosis factor inhibitor failure status, baseline C-reactive protein, and corticosteroid use at baseline. Results: At baseline, the mean Mayo subscores for the placebo and tofacitinib groups were 2.5 for stool frequency and 1.6 for rectal bleeding. By Day 3, significantly more patients achieved each of the binary efficacy endpoints (defined in Table) with tofacitinib vs placebo (all p<0.05). Among patients with prior tumor necrosis factor inhibitor failure, 117 (26.8%) tofacitinib-treated patients had reduction from baseline stool frequency ≥1 at Day 3, vs 16 (14.0%) with placebo, and 133 (30.6%) tofacitinib-treated patients had reduction from baseline rectal bleeding ≥1 at Day 3, vs 14 (12.5%) with placebo. Subgroup analyses demonstrated generally consistent effects of tofacitinib treatment vs placebo, regardless of prior tumor necrosis factor inhibitor treatment failure status (Figure), baseline C-reactive protein, and corticosteroid use at baseline. Conclusion: Significant symptomatic improvements were observed with tofacitinib vs placebo as early as Day 3. A consistent treatment effect was observed regardless of whether patients had prior tumor necrosis factor inhibitor treatment failure. These results support the rapid onset of tofacitinib efficacy previously reported based on significant improvement vs placebo at 2 weeks in partial Mayo score, and extend this result to response at Day 3.1 Reference: 1. Sandborn WJ et al. N Engl J Med 2017;376:1723-36. [Table Presented] [Figure Presented]
Epistemonikos ID: 740aacd8105fd3379f746f0184f7cababb1c2107
First added on: Mar 23, 2022