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Long-term outcomes of vedolizumab in inflammatory bowel disease: the Swedish prospective multicentre SVEAH extension study

Authors :
Visuri, Isabella
Eriksson, Carl
Karlqvist, Sara
Lykiardopoulos, Byron
Karlen, Per
Grip, Olof
Soderman, Charlotte
Almer, Sven
Hertervig, Erik
Marsal, Jan
Malmgren, Carolina
Delin, Jenny
Strid, Hans
Sjoberg, Mats
Bergemalm, Daniel
Hjortswang, Henrik
Halfvarson, Jonas
Visuri, Isabella
Eriksson, Carl
Karlqvist, Sara
Lykiardopoulos, Byron
Karlen, Per
Grip, Olof
Soderman, Charlotte
Almer, Sven
Hertervig, Erik
Marsal, Jan
Malmgren, Carolina
Delin, Jenny
Strid, Hans
Sjoberg, Mats
Bergemalm, Daniel
Hjortswang, Henrik
Halfvarson, Jonas
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background:Real-world data on long-term outcomes of vedolizumab (VDZ) are scarce. Objective:To assess long-term outcomes (up to 3 years) of VDZ in treating inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Design:A nationwide, prospective multicentre extension of a Swedish observational study on VDZ assessing Effectiveness And Healthcare resource utilization in patients with IBD (SVEAH). Methods:After re-consent, data of patients with Crohns disease (CD) (n = 68) and ulcerative colitis (UC) (n = 46) treated with VDZ were prospectively recorded using an electronic case report form integrated with the Swedish IBD Register (SWIBREG). The primary outcome was clinical remission (defined as Harvey-Bradshaw Index <= 4 in CD and partial Mayo score <= 2 in UC) at 104 and 156 weeks in patients with a response and/or remission 12 weeks after starting VDZ. Secondary outcomes included health-related quality of life (HRQoL) and biochemical outcomes. Results:VDZ continuation rates were high at weeks 104 and 156, 88% and 84%, respectively, for CD and 87% and 78%, respectively, for UC. Of the 53 CD patients with a response/remission at 12 weeks, 40 (75%) patients were in remission at 104 weeks and 42 (79%) patients at 156 weeks. For UC, these numbers were 25/31 (81%) and 22/31 (71%), respectively. Improvements were seen in the Short Health Scale (p < 0.01 for each dimension; CD, n = 51; UC, n = 33) and the EuroQol 5-Dimensions, 5-levels index value (p < 0.01; CD, n = 39; UC, n = 30). Median plasma-C-reactive protein concentrations (mg/L) decreased from 5 at baseline to 4 in CD (p = 0.01, n = 53) and from 5 to 4 in UC (p = 0.03, n = 34) at 156 weeks. Correspondingly, median faecal-calprotectin (mu g/g) decreased from 641 to 114 in CD patients (p < 0.01, n = 26) and from 387 to 37 in UC patients (p = 0.02, n = 17). Conclusion:VDZ demonstrated high continuation rates and was associated with improvements in clinical outcomes, HRQoL measures and inflammatory markers at<br />Funding Agencies|Takeda [EUPAS22735]; Swedish governments agreement on medical training and research [OLL-836791, OLL-934569, OLL-929900, OLL-960775]

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1428023864
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177.17562848231174953