AI Article Synopsis

  • * Conducted at three hospitals, the research involved 45 adults receiving vedolizumab, with serum concentrations measured at weeks 6 and 14, and responses evaluated at multiple points up to one year.
  • * Results indicated that higher serum concentrations at week 6 correlated with better early and long-term responses to treatment, suggesting potential benefits of early monitoring for improving patient outcomes.

Article Abstract

Objective: Evidence on the usefulness of proactive monitoring of vedolizumab serum concentrations during the induction phase of treatment is limited. The objective of our study was to evaluate the effectiveness of measuring such concentrations during this phase in predicting response to  treatment in patients with ulcerative colitis with a view to determining whether  patients would benefit from early monitoring of  edolizumab serum concentrations.

Method: This was a prospective descriptive study carried out at three public  general hospitals. It included adult patients with ulcerative colitis who were  initiated on vedolizumab at the participating hospitals from June 2019 to June  2020. Vedolizumab serum concentrations were determined  at weeks 6 and 14.  Response to treatment was biologically, clinically, and endoscopically  evaluated at weeks 6, 14, and 52. An analysis was made of the relationship  between vedolizumab serum concentrations at week 6 and early response to  treatment, and of the relationship between the vedolizumab serum  concentrations at weeks 6 and 14 and persistent response at one year.

Results: A total of 45 patients were included of whom 22 (49%) were considered non-responsive after one year and required intensification of treatment. The median (interquartile range) vedolizumab serum  oncentrations obtained at 6 weeks was higher in patients who obtained an  early response and in those who maintained the response at one year than  in  those who did not respond to vedolizumab [27.4 (19.0-40.8) μg/mL vs 15.6  (13.4-28.5) μg/mL; p = 0.018] and [29.9 (19.2-43.2) μg/mL vs 18.2 (15.4- 26.9) μg/mL; p = 0.022] respectively. Vedolizumab serum concentrations ≥  17.3 μg/mL at week 6 were predictive of a good early response, and  edolizumab serum concentrations ≥ 26.1 μg/mL at week 6 predicted a  sustained response at one year. No relationship was found between  edolizumab serum concentrations at week 14 and a sustained response.

Conclusions: We observed a relationship between vedolizumab serum concentrations determined at week 6, and early and maintained  esponse to vedolizumab therapy in patients with ulcerative colitis, which  supports early drug monitoring during the induction phase to individualize  treatment and increase effectiveness.

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