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Greater Transplant-Free Survival in Patients Receiving Obeticholic Acid for Primary Biliary Cholangitis in a Clinical Trial Setting Compared to Real-World External Controls

Authors :
C. Fiorella Murillo Perez
Holly Fisher
Shaun Hiu
Dorcas Kareithi
Femi Adekunle
Tracy Mayne
Elizabeth Malecha
Erik Ness
Adriaan J. van der Meer
Willem J. Lammers
Palak J. Trivedi
Pier Maria Battezzati
Frederik Nevens
Kris V. Kowdley
Tony Bruns
Nora Cazzagon
Annarosa Floreani
Andrew L. Mason
Albert Parés
Maria-Carlota Londoño
Pietro Invernizzi
Marco Carbone
Ana Lleo
Marlyn J. Mayo
George N. Dalekos
Nikolaos K. Gatselis
Douglas Thorburn
Xavier Verhelst
Aliya Gulamhusein
Harry L.A. Janssen
Rachel Smith
Steve Flack
Victoria Mulcahy
Michael Trauner
Christopher L. Bowlus
Keith D. Lindor
Christophe Corpechot
David Jones
George Mells
Gideon M. Hirschfield
James Wason
Bettina E. Hansen
Richard Sturgess
Christopher Healey
Anton Gunasekera
Yiannis Kallis
Gavin Wright
Thiriloganathan Mathialahan
Richard Evans
Jaber Gasem
David Ramanaden
Emma Ward
Mahesh Bhalme
Paul Southern
James Maggs
Mohamed Yousif
Brijesh Srivastava
Matthew Foxton
Carole Collins
Yash Prasad
Francisco Porras-Perez
Tom Yapp
Minesh Patel
Roland Ede
Martyn Carte
Konrad Koss
Prayman Sattianayagam
Charles Grimley
Jude Tidbury
Dina Mansour
Matilda Beckley
Coral Hollywood
John Ramag
Harriet Gordon
Joanne Ridpath
Bob Grover
George Abouda
Ian Rees
Mark Narain
Imroz Salam
Paul Banim
Debasish Das
Helen Matthews
Faiyaz Mohammed
Rebecca Jones
Sambit Sen
George Bird
Martin Prince
Geeta Prasad
Paul Kitchen
John Hutchinson
Prakash Gupta
Amir Shah
Subrata Saha
Katharine Pollock
Stephen Barclay
Natasha McDonald
Simon Rushbrook
Robert Przemioslo
Andrew Millar
Steven Mitchell
Andrew Davis
Asifabbas Naqvi
Tom Lee
Stephen Ryder
Jane Collier
Matthew Cramp
Richard Aspinal
Jonathan Booth
Earl Williams
Hyder Hussaini
John Christie
Tehreem Chaudhry
Stephen Mann
Aftab Ala
Julia Maltby
Chris Corbett
Saket Singhal
Barbara Hoeroldt
Jeff Butterworth
Andrew Douglas
Rohit Sinha
Simon Panter
Jeremy Shearman
Gary Bray
Michael Roberts
Daniel Forton
Nicola Taylor
Wisam Jafar
Matthew Cowan
Chin Lye Ch'ng
Mesbah Rahman
Emma Wesley
Sanjiv Jain
Aditya Mandal
Mark Wright
Palak Trivedi
Fiona Gordon
Esther Unitt
Andrew Austin
Altaf Palegwala
Vishwaraj Vemala
Andrew Higham
Jocelyn Fraser
Andy Li
Subramaniam Ramakrishnan
Alistair King
Simon Whalley
Ian Gee
Richard Keld
Helen Fellows
James Gotto
Charles Millson
Gastroenterology & Hepatology
Public Health
Source :
Gastroenterology, 163(6), 1630-1642.e3. W.B. Saunders
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

BACKGROUND & AIMS: The Primary Biliary Cholangitis (PBC) Obeticholic Acid (OCA) International Study of Efficacy (POISE) randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial demonstrated that OCA reduced biomarkers associated with adverse clinical outcomes (ie, alkaline phosphatase, bilirubin, aspartate aminotransferase, and alanine aminotransferase) in patients with PBC. The objective of this study was to evaluate time to first occurrence of liver transplantation or death in patients with OCA in the POISE trial and open-label extension vs comparable non-OCA-treated external controls. METHODS: Propensity scores were generated for external control patients meeting POISE eligibility criteria from 2 registry studies (Global PBC and UK-PBC) using an index date selected randomly between the first and last date (inclusive) on which eligibility criteria were met. Cox proportional hazards models weighted by inverse probability of treatment assessed time to death or liver transplantation. Additional analyses (Global PBC only) added hepatic decompensation to the composite end point and assessed efficacy in patients with or without cirrhosis. RESULTS: During the 6-year follow-up, there were 5 deaths or liver transplantations in 209 subjects in the POISE cohort (2.4%), 135 of 1381 patients in the Global PBC control (10.0%), and 281 of 2135 patients in the UK-PBC control (13.2%). The hazard ratios (HRs) for the primary outcome were 0.29 (95% CI, 0.10-0.83) for POISE vs Global PBC and 0.30 (95% CI, 0.12-0.75) for POISE vs UK-PBC. In the Global PBC study, HR was 0.20 (95% CI, 0.03-1.22) for patients with cirrhosis and 0.31 (95% CI, 0.09-1.04) for those without cirrhosis; HR was 0.42 (95% CI, 0.21-0.85) including hepatic decompensation. CONCLUSIONS: Patients treated with OCA in a trial setting had significantly greater transplant-free survival than comparable external control patients. ispartof: Gastroenterology vol:163 issue:6 pages:1630-1642.e3 ispartof: location:United States status: published

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00165085
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Gastroenterology, 163(6), 1630-1642.e3. W.B. Saunders
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....971d07164b504c479b9334f7d6369923