학술논문

Comparison of Short-Term Outcomes for Standard Versus Nonstandard Induction Dosing of Infliximab for Pediatric Inflammatory Bowel Disease.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Pediatric Pharmacology & Therapeutics. 2022, Vol. 27 Issue 8, p732-738. 7p.
Subject
*INFLAMMATORY bowel diseases
*CROHN'S disease
*ULCERATIVE colitis
*DRUG monitoring
*TUMOR necrosis factors
*DISEASE remission
Language
ISSN
1551-6776
Abstract
OBJECTIVE Recent studies have emphasized the early use of infliximab (IFX) in pediatric patients with inflammatory bowel disease. Standard dosing of 5 mg/kg/dose may not be sufficient to achieve optimal clinical outcomes. The aim of our study was to compare short-term outcomes with standard dosing of IFX to higher, nonstandard dosing of IFX for induction therapy. METHODS Retrospective study of 162 pediatric patients receiving either standard (5-6 mg/kg, n = 90) or nonstandard (>6 mg/kg, n = 72) dosing of IFX during induction was performed. Patient demographics, clinical outcomes, and laboratory data were collected. Need for dose escalation during the first 6 months, combination therapy with immunomodulators, and steroid-free progression were investigated. RESULTS Clinical remission rates between the 2 groups were significantly different, with patients receiving nonstandard dosing demonstrating higher rates (58% vs 78%; p = 0.012). Use of combination therapy with immunomodulators was significantly different between standard and nonstandard groups (80% vs 48%; p < 0.001). Numeric trend in need for IFX dose escalation in the first 6 months was seen between standard and nonstandard groups (54% vs 39%, respectively; p = 0.087). Post-induction IFX trough concentrations, rates of antibody development, drug discontinuation, and infusion reaction were similar. CONCLUSIONS Nonstandard induction dosing of IFX was associated with higher rates of clinical remission, despite similar rates of serum IFX trough concentrations. There was a numeric trend towards the standard group requiring dose escalation within the first 6 months of therapy. Patients given nonstandard dosing may achieve superior clinical outcomes compared with those on standard dosing. ABBREVIATIONS ATI, antibodies to infliximab; CRP, C-reactive protein; IBD, inflammatory bowel disease; IFX, infliximab; PUCAI, pediatric ulcerative colitis activity index; sPCDAI, short pediatric Crohn disease activity index; TDM, therapeutic drug monitoring; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; UC, ulcerative colitis [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]