Back to Search Start Over

Real-world experience with obeticholic acid in patients with primary biliary cholangitis

Authors :
Anna Morgando
Mauro Viganò
Ana Lleo
Maurizio Pompili
Elisabetta De Gasperi
Daphne D’Amato
Alessandro Mussetto
Nora Cazzagon
Pietro Invernizzi
Francesca Colapietro
Vincenzo Ronca
Sara Labanca
Ester Vanni
M.R. Cannavò
Francesco Losito
Ernesto Claar
G. Scifo
Giovanni Galati
Umberto Vespasiani-Gentilucci
Silvia Storato
Alessio Gerussi
Grazia Anna Niro
Antonio Izzi
Barbara Omazzi
Antonio De Vincentis
Valentina Feletti
Giuseppe Grassi
Valeria Pace Palitti
Clara Mancuso
Vincenza Calvaruso
Evelise Frazzetto
Roberto Boldizzoni
Marco Marzioni
Floriano Rosina
Andrea Palermo
Antonino Picciotto
Valentina Bellia
Gaetano Bertino
Italian Pbc Registry
Guido Poggi
Rodolfo Sacco
Domenico Alvaro
Luigi Muratori
Maria Vinci
Marie Graciella Pigozzi
Raffaele Cozzolongo
Natalia Terreni
Annarosa Floreani
Maurizio Russello
Marco Distefano
Rinaldo Pellicano
Maria D'Antò
Marco Carbone
Rosanna Venere
R. Fontana
Antonio Picardi
Silvia Casella
S. E. O'Donnell
Federica Malinverno
Stefano Fagiuoli
Laura Cristoferi
Luchino Chessa
Giacomo Mulinacci
Pietro Pozzoni
Antonino Castellaneta
Giulia Marconi
Adriano M. Pellicelli
Francesca Romana Ponziani
Leonardo Baiocchi
D'Amato, D
De Vincentis, A
Malinverno, F
Vigano, M
Alvaro, D
Pompili, M
Picciotto, A
Palitti, V
Russello, M
Storato, S
Pigozzi, M
Calvaruso, V
De Gasperi, E
Lleo, A
Castellaneta, A
Pellicelli, A
Cazzagon, N
Floreani, A
Muratori, L
Fagiuoli, S
Niro, G
Feletti, V
Cozzolongo, R
Terreni, N
Marzioni, M
Pellicano, R
Pozzoni, P
Baiocchi, L
Chessa, L
Rosina, F
Bertino, G
Vinci, M
Morgando, A
Vanni, E
Scifo, G
Sacco, R
D'Anto, M
Bellia, V
Boldizzoni, R
Casella, S
Omazzi, B
Poggi, G
Cristoferi, L
Gerussi, A
Ronca, V
Venere, R
Ponziani, F
Cannavo, M
Mussetto, A
Fontana, R
Losito, F
Frazzetto, E
Distefano, M
Colapietro, F
Labanca, S
Marconi, G
Grassi, G
Galati, G
O'Donnell, S
Mancuso, C
Mulinacci, G
Palermo, A
Claar, E
Izzi, A
Picardi, A
Invernizzi, P
Carbone, M
Vespasiani-Gentilucci, U
D'Amato D, De Vincentis A, Malinverno F, Viganò M, Alvaro D, Pompili M, Picciotto A, Palitti VP, Russello M, Storato S, Pigozzi MG, Calvaruso V, De Gasperi E, Lleo A, Castellaneta A, Pellicelli A, Cazzagon N, Floreani A, Muratori L, Fagiuoli S, Niro GA, Feletti V, Cozzolongo R, Terreni N, Marzioni M, Pellicano R, Pozzoni P, Baiocchi L, Chessa L, Rosina F, Bertino G, Vinci M, Morgando A, Vanni E, Scifo G, Sacco R, D'Antò M, Bellia V, Boldizzoni R, Casella S, Omazzi B, Poggi G, Cristoferi L, Gerussi A, Ronca V, Venere R, Ponziani F, Cannavò M, Mussetto A, Fontana R, Losito F, Frazzetto E, Distefano M, Colapietro F, Labanca S, Marconi G, Grassi G, Galati G, O'Donnell SE, Mancuso C, Mulinacci G, Palermo A, Claar E, Izzi A, Picardi A, Invernizzi P, Carbone M, Vespasiani-Gentilucci U
Italian PBC Registry and the Club Epatologi Ospedalieri (CLEO)/Associazione Italiana Gastroenterologi ed Endoscopisti Digestivi Ospedalieri (AIGO) PBC Study Group.
Source :
JHEP Reports, Vol 3, Iss 2, Pp 100248-(2021), JHEP Reports
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background & aims Obeticholic acid (OCA) is the second-line treatment approved for patients with primary biliary cholangitis (PBC) and an inadequate response or intolerance to ursodeoxycholic acid. We aimed to evaluate the effectiveness and safety of OCA under real-world conditions. Methods Patients were recruited into the Italian PBC Registry, a multicentre, observational cohort study that monitors patients with PBC at national level. The primary endpoint was the biochemical response according to Poise criteria; the secondary endpoint was the biochemical response according to normal range criteria, defined as normal levels of bilirubin, alkaline phosphatase (ALP), and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) at 12 months. Safety and tolerability were also assessed. Results We analysed 191 patients until at least 12 months of follow-up. Median age was 57 years, 94% female, 61 (32%) had cirrhosis, 28 (15%) had histologically proven overlap with autoimmune hepatitis (PBC-AIH). At 12 months, significant median reductions of ALP (-32.3%), ALT (-31.4%), and bilirubin (-11.2%) were observed. Response rates were 42.9% according to Poise criteria, and 11% by normal range criteria. Patients with cirrhosis had lower response than patients without cirrhosis (29.5% vs. 49.2%, p = 0.01), owing to a higher rate of OCA discontinuation (30% vs. 12%, p = 0.004), although with similar ALP reduction (29.4% vs. 34%, p = 0.53). Overlap PBC-AIH had a similar response to pure PBC (46.4% vs. 42.3%, p = 0.68), with higher ALT reduction at 6 months (-38% vs. -29%, p = 0.04). Thirty-three patients (17%) prematurely discontinued OCA because of adverse events, of whom 11 experienced serious adverse events. Treatment-induced pruritus was the leading cause of OCA discontinuation (67%). Conclusions Effectiveness and safety of OCA under real-world conditions mirror those in the Poise trial. Patients with cirrhosis had lower tolerability. Overlap PBC-AIH showed higher ALT reduction at 6 months compared with patients with pure PBC. Lay summary Obeticholic acid (OCA) was shown to be effective in more than one-third of patients not responding to ursodeoxycholic acid in a real-world context in Italy. Patients with cirrhosis had more side effects with OCA, and this led to suspension of the drug in one-third of patients. OCA was also effective in patients who had overlap between autoimmune hepatitis and primary biliary cholangitis.<br />Graphical abstract<br />Highlights • Under real-world conditions, OCA was effective in ~43% of patients who were non-responders to UDCA, according to Poise criteria. • Patients with cirrhosis showed lower efficacy (29.5%), mainly attributed to reduced tolerability and higher discontinuation rate. • Patients with overlap AIH-PBC showed a comparable efficacy to pure PBC, with a higher ALT reduction at 6 months. • Most patients with PBC are still in need of additional therapy if aiming to normalise liver biochemistry.

Subjects

Subjects :
upper limit of normal
Cirrhosis
ALT
AMA
Autoimmunity
antinuclear antibodies
ULN
PBC
Gastroenterology
UDCA
Settore MED/12
ULN, upper limit of normal
obeticholic acid
aRR, adjusted risk ratio
CRFs, case record form
AST, aspartate transferase
Clinical endpoint
GGT, gamma-glutamyl transferase
QC
primary biliary cholangitis
Ursodeoxycholic acid
ANA
TCC
Cholestasi
TIPS
Treatment Completer Cohort
ANA, antinuclear antibodie
medicine.medical_specialty
RR
UDCA, ursodeoxycholic acid
TIPS, transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt
OCA
Cirrhosi
ALP, alkaline phosphatase
autoimmune hepatitis
medicine.disease
digestive system diseases
Discontinuation
Keywords: AIH, autoimmune hepatiti
QC, quality control
chemistry
gamma-glutamyl transferase
randomised controlled trial
electronic data capture
antimitochondrial antibodies
aspartate transferase
Autoimmune hepatitis
chemistry.chemical_compound
AIH
CRFs
Immunology and Allergy
adjusted risk ratio
ANA, antinuclear antibodies
RR, risk ratio
Overall cohort
ALT, alanine transferase
AMA, antimitochondrial antibodie
Cholestasis
CRFs, case record forms
Obeticholic acid
Overlap PBC-AIH
ursodeoxycholic acid
OCA, obeticholic acid
Tolerability
alkaline phosphatase
RCT
Research Article
medicine.drug
case record forms
Context (language use)
AMA, antimitochondrial antibodies
Internal medicine
EDC, electronic data capture
transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt
Internal Medicine
medicine
RCT, randomised controlled trial
OC
lcsh:RC799-869
quality control
alanine transferase
AST
aRR
Hepatology
business.industry
AIH, autoimmune hepatitis
TCC, Treatment Completer Cohort
PBC, primary biliary cholangiti
GGT
risk ratio
OC, Overall cohort
ALP
lcsh:Diseases of the digestive system. Gastroenterology
PBC, primary biliary cholangitis
business
EDC

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JHEP Reports, Vol 3, Iss 2, Pp 100248-(2021), JHEP Reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....61fe7d019f05517ffe25526686712b24