As Seen In the Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology Journal: No Impact of Concomitant Medications on Efficacy and Safety of Biologics and Small Molecules for Ulcerative Colitis
- Derek Baker
- Oct 16, 2024
- 2 min read
Updated: Oct 21, 2024
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ABSTRACT
Background and Aims
While participants with inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) in clinical trials of biologics and small molecule drugs (henceforth, advanced therapies) frequently receive several medications concomitantly, it is unclear how they modify treatment effect.
Methods
Through an individual patient data pooled analysis of ten clinical trials of advanced therapies for moderate-to-severe ulcerative colitis (UC), we assessed whether concomitant exposure to corticosteroids, immunomodulators, 5-aminosalicylates, proton pump inhibitors (PPIs), histamine receptor antagonists (H2RA), opiates, antidepressants, and antibiotics modified the effect of the intervention on treatment efficacy and safety outcomes, using modified Poisson regression model.
Results
Of 6044 patients (4280 receiving intervention, 1764 receiving placebo), several received concomitant corticosteroids (47%), immunomodulators (28%), 5-aminosalicylates (68%), PPIs (14%), H2RAs (2%), opiates (7%), antidepressants (6%), and/or antibiotics (5%). After adjusting for confounders and examining treatment efficacy of intervention vs. placebo, we observed no impact of concomitant exposure to corticosteroids (ratio of relative risk of drug vs. placebo with vs. without concomitant exposure: RRR, 0.81 [95% CI,0.63-1.06], 5-aminosalicylates (RRR, 1.04[0.78-1.39]), PPIs (RRR, 0.87 [0.61-1.22]), H2RAs (RRR, 1.72[0.97-14.29]), opiates (RRR, 0.90[0.54-1.49]), antidepressants (RRR, 1.02[0.57-1.83]), and antibiotics (RRR, 0.72[0.44-1.16]) on likelihood of clinical remission. Concomitant exposure to immunomodulators was associated with lower likelihood of achieving clinical remission (RRR, 0.73[0.55-0.97]), particularly with non-TNF antagonists.
Conclusions
In clinical trials of advanced therapies for UC, baseline concomitant exposure to multiple commonly used class of medications does not impact treatment efficacy or safety. These findings directly inform design of regulatory clinical trials with respect to managing concomitant medications at baseline.
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