Copyright
©The Author(s) 2015.
World J Gastrointest Surg. Dec 27, 2015; 7(12): 360-369
Published online Dec 27, 2015. doi: 10.4240/wjgs.v7.i12.360
Published online Dec 27, 2015. doi: 10.4240/wjgs.v7.i12.360
Ref. | Study design | Population | n | Key findings | |
Thiopurines | Ardizzone et al[11] | RCT comparing AZA vs 5-ASA | Steroid dependent UC | 72 | No difference in colectomy rates at 6 mo between AZA and 5-ASA groups |
Kaplan et al[13] | Population based time trends analysis of colectomy rates | Unselected UC | N/A | Reduction in elective colectomy rates of 7.4% per year | |
Doubling of TP use over the study period | |||||
Emergency colectomy rates remain static | |||||
Targownik et al[14] | Population based analysis of colectomy rates | Unselected UC | 3752 | 10.4% colectomy rate at 10 yr post diagnosis | |
> 16 wk TP therapy associated with reduced colectomy requirement | |||||
Chhaya et al[15] | Population based time trends analysis of colectomy rates | Unselected UC | 8673 | TP use > 12 mo associated with a 71% reduction in risk of colectomy | |
Early TP use not associated with added benefit | |||||
No significant change in colectomy rates over study period | |||||
Cañas-Ventura et al[16] | Retrospective descriptive cohort study of UC patients receiving AZA | Unselected UC | 1334 | 5 yr colectomy rate at 8.8% | |
TP use within 33 mo of diagnosis associated with increased risk of colectomy | |||||
aTNF | Sjöberg et al[24] | Multi-centre retrospective analysis of IFX rescue therapy | Acute severe UC | 211 | 64%, 59% and 53% colectomy-free survival at years 1, 3, 5 |
Majority of colectomies within first 2 wk of IFX therapy | |||||
Gustavsson et al[26] | RCT comparing IFX rescue therapy vs placebo | Acute severe UC | 45 | 3 yr colectomy free survival 50% | |
Laharie et al[29] | Head to head RCT comparing IFX vs CSA as rescue therapy | Acute severe UC | 115 | No significant differences in colectomy rates between two therapies at 3 mo | |
Sandborn et al[19] | ACT 1 and 2 RCT of IFX vs placebo | Moderate to severe UC | 728 | Colectomy rate significantly lower in IFX group (10% vs 17%) at 54 wk | |
Feagan et al[41] | ULTRA 1 and 2 RCT of ADA vs placebo | Moderate to severe UC | 963 | Very low colectomy rates reported at 52 wk (approximately 4%) | |
No difference in colectomy rates between ADA and placebo | |||||
Reich et al[45] | Time trends analysis of colectomy rates following introduction of IFX | Unselected UC | 481 | 19% annual decrease in elective colectomy in biologic era | |
15% annual decrease in emergency colectomy in biologic era | |||||
Costa et al[50] | Meta-analysis of aTNF use in UC | Moderate to severe UC | 836 | Reduced risk of surgery at 1 yr in patient treated with IFX compared to placebo (OR = 0.55) | |
NNT was 11 |
Ref. | Study design | Population | n | Key findings | |
Thiopurines | Actis et al[61] | Retrospective study comparing hospitalisation before and after AZA induction | Severe UC | 17 | Significant decrease in hospitalisation for patients with UC up to 5.8 yr following AZA induction |
Most of patients were also treated with ciclosporin at AZA induction | |||||
Herrinton et al[62] | Population based cohort study of prescribing trends in UC | Unselected UC | 5895 | 150% increase in immuno-modulator use in UC between 1998-2005 | |
Concurrent reduction in UC hospitalisations in the same period by a third | |||||
Vester-Andersen et al[63] | Prospective descriptive study of IBD inception cohort | Unselected UC | 300 | 26% exposure to immuno-modulator during follow up | |
Hospitalisation rates decreased from 4.7 d/person-years in year 1 after diagnosis to 0.4 d in year 5 | |||||
Immuno-modulator therapy found not to be significant in predicting need for hospitalisation | |||||
aTNF | Carter et al[65] | Medical insurance cost analysis study | Unselected UC | 420 | UC patients with a prescription for infliximab for > 80% of the study period had less hospitalisation requirement, lower admission costs and shorter inpatient stays |
Oussalah et al[37] | Multicentre retrospective study on outcomes in UC patients post aTNF | Unselected UC | 191 | Estimated hospitalisation-free survival at 1, 2, 3 and 6 yr were 66.7%, 60.2%, 57.1% and 44.6% respectively | |
Earlier use of aTNF predictive of need for hospitalisation | |||||
Sandborn et al[19] | ACT 1 and 2 RCT comparing IFX with placebo | Moderate to severe UC | 728 | Of patients treated with IFX, 84% remained free of hospitalisation at 54 wk, compared to 75% in the placebo group | |
Feagan et al[41] | ULTRA 1 and 2 RCT comparing ADA with placebo | Moderate to severe UC | 963 | Significantly reduced all-cause and UC-related admissions at both 8 wk and 52 wk in patients treated with ADA compared to placebo | |
Lopez et al[47] | Meta-analysis of aTNF in UC outcomes | Moderate to severe UC | 964 | aTNF therapy was superior to placebo in reducing UC-related hospitalisations, with a relative risk of 0.71 (95%CI: 0.56-0.90) |
- Citation: Alexakis C, Pollok RCG. Impact of thiopurines and anti-tumour necrosis factor therapy on hospitalisation and long-term surgical outcomes in ulcerative colitis. World J Gastrointest Surg 2015; 7(12): 360-369
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/1948-9366/full/v7/i12/360.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.4240/wjgs.v7.i12.360