TY - JOUR
T1 - Discontinuation of infliximab in patients with ulcerative colitis in remission (HAYABUSA)
T2 - a multicentre, open-label, randomised controlled trial
AU - HAYABUSA Study Group
AU - Kobayashi, Taku
AU - Motoya, Satoshi
AU - Nakamura, Shiro
AU - Yamamoto, Takayuki
AU - Nagahori, Masakazu
AU - Tanaka, Shinji
AU - Hisamatsu, Tadakazu
AU - Hirai, Fumihito
AU - Nakase, Hiroshi
AU - Watanabe, Kenji
AU - Matsumoto, Takayuki
AU - Tanaka, Masanori
AU - Abe, Takayuki
AU - Suzuki, Yasuo
AU - Watanabe, Mamoru
AU - Hibi, Toshifumi
AU - Kato, Shingo
AU - Maemoto, Atsushi
AU - Matsuura, Minoru
AU - Sakemi, Ryosuke
AU - Sasaki, Makoto
AU - Tsujikawa, Tomoyuki
AU - Esaki, Motohiro
AU - Fukata, Norimasa
AU - Kitamura, Kazuya
AU - Hiraoka, Sakiko
AU - Hokari, Ryota
AU - Ishihara, Shunji
AU - Mizoshita, Tsutomu
AU - Naito, Yuji
AU - Omata, Fumio
AU - Saruta, Masayuki
AU - Yoshino, Takuya
N1 - Funding Information:
TK reports personal fees from Alfresa, Covidien, Eli Lilly, Ferring, Janssen, Kyorin, Mochida, Nippon Kyaku, Pfizer, Takeda, Thermo Scientific, AbbVie, Ajinomoto, Asahi Kasei Medical, Astellas, Celltrion, EA Pharma, Mitsubishi Tanabe, Zeria, Eisai, Gilead Sciences, and JIMRO; and grants from AbbVie, EA Pharma, Otsuka, Zeria, Kyorin, Mochida, Thermo Fisher Scientific, Alfresa, Nippon Kyaku, and Asahi Kasei Medical. SM reports grants from Takeda, Mitsubishi Tanabe, and Janssen. SN reports grants and personal fees from Mitsubishi Tanabe, AbbVie, Mochida; grants from EA Pharma, Kyorin, JIMRO, and Zeria; and personal fees from Janssen and Takeda. MN reports lecture fees from Mitsubishi Tanabe. THis reports grants and personal fees from EA Pharma, AbbVie, Pfizer, Mitsubishi Tanabe, JIMRO, Mochida, Kyorin, and Takeda; personal fees from Celgene, Janssen, and Nichi-lko; and grants from Daiichi-Sankyo. HN reports personal fees from AbbVie, Kissei, Kyorin, Mitsubishi Tanabe, Janssen, Takeda, Pfizer, Celgene, EA Pharma, Zeria, Mochida, Nippon Kayaku, and JIMRO; and grants from Hoya Group Pentax Medical, Boehringer Ingelheim, and Bristol Myers Squibb. KW reports grants and personal fees from Mitsubishi Tanabe and personal fees from Nippon Kayaku. TM reports personal fees from EA Pharma, AbbVie, Mitsubishi Tanabe, Takeda, Kyorin, Janssen, Mochida, Zeria, AstraZeneca, and Sekisui Medical; and personal fees and grants from Nippon Kayaku and Pfizer. TA reports personal fees from EA Pharma, Kissei, Mochida, and Mitsubishi Tanabe. YS reports grants and personal fees from AbbVie, Mitsubishi Tanabe, Mochida, and EA Pharma; personal fees from Zeria, Kyorin, and Janssen; and grants from JIMRO, Kissei, and Nippon Kayaku. MW reports grants and personal fees from Mitsubishi Tanabe, Takeda, Zeria, Nippon Kayaku, Mochida, AbbVie, EA Pharma, Pfizer, and Kissei; grants from Miyarisan, JIMRO, and Kyorin; and personal fees from Janssen, Celltrion, Celgene, Eli Lilly, and Gilead Sciences. THib reports personal fees from Aspen, Ferring, Gilead Sciences, Bristol Myers Squibb, Celltrion, EA Pharma, Eli Lilly, Nippon Kayaku, Pfizer, Kisse; and grants and personal fees from AbbVie, Janssen, JIMRO, Takeda, Zeria, Kyorin, Nichi-Iko, Mitsubishi Tanabe, and Mochida; and grants from Otsuka. All other authors declare no competing interests.
Funding Information:
This study was sponsored by Mitsubishi Tanabe Pharma Corporation and was also partly supported by a Grant-in-Aid for the Intractable Disease Project of the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare of Japan.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2021/6
Y1 - 2021/6
N2 - Background: Anti-tumour necrosis factor (TNF) agents are the mainstay of long-term treatment for refractory ulcerative colitis. However, long-term use of anti-TNF therapy might lead to an increased risk of malignancy or infection. To date, no randomised controlled trial has evaluated whether anti-TNF agents can be safely discontinued in patients with ulcerative colitis in remission. We therefore aimed to compare outcomes in these patients who continued infliximab with those who discontinued infliximab. Methods: We did a multicentre, open-label randomised controlled trial at 24 specialist centres in Japan. We enrolled patients with ulcerative colitis who were in remission, had been treated with intravenous infliximab (5 mg/kg) every 8 weeks, and had started infliximab at least 14 weeks before study enrolment. No restrictions regarding age and comorbidities were used to exclude participation. Patients who were confirmed to be in remission for more than 6 months, to be corticosteroid-free, and to have a Mayo Endoscopic Subscore (MES) of 0 or 1 were centrally randomised. An independent organisation randomly assigned patients (1:1) into either the infliximab-continued group or infliximab-discontinued group, using a computer-generated stratified randomisation procedure. The stratified factors were the use of immunomodulators (yes or no) and MES (0 or 1). Neither patients nor health-care providers were masked to the randomisation. The primary endpoint was the remission rate at week 48 in the full analysis set, which was based on the intention-to-treat principle and excluded participants with no efficacy data after randomisation. This study was registered with the University Hospital Medical Information Network Center Trials registry, UMIN000012092. Findings: Between June 16, 2014, and July 28, 2017, 122 patients were eligible for screening and a total of 95 patients were randomly assigned to the infliximab-continued group (n=48) or the infliximab-discontinued group (n=47). 92 patients (n=46 for both groups) were included in the full analysis set. 37 (80·4% [95% CI 66·1–90·6]) of 46 patients in the infliximab-continued group and 25 (54·3% [39·0–69·1]) of 46 patients in the infliximab-discontinued group were in remission at week 48. The between-group difference was 26·1% (95% CI 7·7–44·5; p=0·0076) before adjustment and 27·3% (95% CI 8·0–44·1; p=0·0059) after adjustment for stratification factors. Eight (17%) of 48 patients in the infliximab-continued group and six (13%) of 47 in the infliximab-discontinued group developed adverse events (between-group difference 3·9% [95% CI −10·3 to 18·1]; p=0·59). In the infliximab-continued group, one patient had an infusion reaction and two patients had psoriatic skin lesions. Eight (66·7%, 95% CI 34·9–90·1) of the 12 patients in the infliximab-discontinuation group who were re-treated with infliximab after relapsing were in remission within 8 weeks of re-treatment; none had infusion reactions. Interpretation: Maintenance of remission was significantly more common in patients who continued infliximab than in those who discontinued. Discontinuing infliximab should therefore be discussed with caution, taking both risk of relapse and efficacy of re-treatment into account. Funding: Mitsubishi Tanabe Pharma Corporation and the Intractable Disease Project of the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare of Japan. Translation: For the Japanese translation of the abstract see Supplementary Materials section.
AB - Background: Anti-tumour necrosis factor (TNF) agents are the mainstay of long-term treatment for refractory ulcerative colitis. However, long-term use of anti-TNF therapy might lead to an increased risk of malignancy or infection. To date, no randomised controlled trial has evaluated whether anti-TNF agents can be safely discontinued in patients with ulcerative colitis in remission. We therefore aimed to compare outcomes in these patients who continued infliximab with those who discontinued infliximab. Methods: We did a multicentre, open-label randomised controlled trial at 24 specialist centres in Japan. We enrolled patients with ulcerative colitis who were in remission, had been treated with intravenous infliximab (5 mg/kg) every 8 weeks, and had started infliximab at least 14 weeks before study enrolment. No restrictions regarding age and comorbidities were used to exclude participation. Patients who were confirmed to be in remission for more than 6 months, to be corticosteroid-free, and to have a Mayo Endoscopic Subscore (MES) of 0 or 1 were centrally randomised. An independent organisation randomly assigned patients (1:1) into either the infliximab-continued group or infliximab-discontinued group, using a computer-generated stratified randomisation procedure. The stratified factors were the use of immunomodulators (yes or no) and MES (0 or 1). Neither patients nor health-care providers were masked to the randomisation. The primary endpoint was the remission rate at week 48 in the full analysis set, which was based on the intention-to-treat principle and excluded participants with no efficacy data after randomisation. This study was registered with the University Hospital Medical Information Network Center Trials registry, UMIN000012092. Findings: Between June 16, 2014, and July 28, 2017, 122 patients were eligible for screening and a total of 95 patients were randomly assigned to the infliximab-continued group (n=48) or the infliximab-discontinued group (n=47). 92 patients (n=46 for both groups) were included in the full analysis set. 37 (80·4% [95% CI 66·1–90·6]) of 46 patients in the infliximab-continued group and 25 (54·3% [39·0–69·1]) of 46 patients in the infliximab-discontinued group were in remission at week 48. The between-group difference was 26·1% (95% CI 7·7–44·5; p=0·0076) before adjustment and 27·3% (95% CI 8·0–44·1; p=0·0059) after adjustment for stratification factors. Eight (17%) of 48 patients in the infliximab-continued group and six (13%) of 47 in the infliximab-discontinued group developed adverse events (between-group difference 3·9% [95% CI −10·3 to 18·1]; p=0·59). In the infliximab-continued group, one patient had an infusion reaction and two patients had psoriatic skin lesions. Eight (66·7%, 95% CI 34·9–90·1) of the 12 patients in the infliximab-discontinuation group who were re-treated with infliximab after relapsing were in remission within 8 weeks of re-treatment; none had infusion reactions. Interpretation: Maintenance of remission was significantly more common in patients who continued infliximab than in those who discontinued. Discontinuing infliximab should therefore be discussed with caution, taking both risk of relapse and efficacy of re-treatment into account. Funding: Mitsubishi Tanabe Pharma Corporation and the Intractable Disease Project of the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare of Japan. Translation: For the Japanese translation of the abstract see Supplementary Materials section.
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U2 - 10.1016/S2468-1253(21)00062-5
DO - 10.1016/S2468-1253(21)00062-5
M3 - Article
C2 - 33887262
AN - SCOPUS:85106252993
SN - 2468-1253
VL - 6
SP - 429
EP - 437
JO - The Lancet Gastroenterology and Hepatology
JF - The Lancet Gastroenterology and Hepatology
IS - 6
ER -