AI Article Synopsis

  • A new subcutaneous form of infliximab (SC-IFX) has been approved for treating inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and shows improved pharmacokinetics and immunogenicity compared to the intravenous form (IV-IFX), while maintaining similar safety and efficacy levels.
  • This study aimed to analyze the outcomes for IBD patients who switched from IV-IFX to SC-IFX, focusing on clinical, biochemical, and pharmacological changes over a 6-month follow-up.
  • Results indicated that all 41 patients remained in clinical remission, with significantly higher serum concentrations of infliximab observed after the switch, while other biochemical markers showed no significant differences.*

Article Abstract

Background: Recently, a formula of subcutaneous infliximab (SC-IFX) has been approved for inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), demonstrating a better pharmacokinetic and immunogenic profiles, compared to intravenous infliximab (IV-IFX), with similar efficacy and safety.

Aim: The aim of this study is to evaluate the clinical, biochemical, and pharmacological outcomes of IBD patients in clinical remission, who switched from IV-IFX to SC-IFX, with a follow-up period of 6 months.

Methods: Retrospective cohort study, including IBD patients in clinical remission, previously medicated with IV-IFX, who switched to SC-IFX 120 mg every other week. Biochemical parameters were evaluated before the switch and 6 months after, namely infliximab serum concentrations, erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), C-reactive protein (CRP), and fecal calprotectin.

Results: Included 41 patients in clinical remission, 32 with Crohn's disease (78.0%) and 9 with ulcerative colitis (22.0%). All patients maintained clinical remission during the 6 months after the switch, with a treatment persistence rate of 100%, and no patients requiring corticosteroid therapy, switching back to IV-IFX, or IBD-related hospitalization. The mean infliximab serum concentrations were significantly higher after 6 months of SC-IFX (17.3 ± 6.6 vs. 9.1 ± 5.5 µg/ml, P  < 0.001). However, there were no differences between values of ESR, CRP, and fecal calprotectin, before and after the switch ( P  = 0.791, P  = 0.246, and P  = 0.639). Additionally, none of the patients developed antibodies to infliximab.

Conclusion: Switching from IV-IFX to SC-IFX in IBD patients in clinical remission is effective and leads to higher infliximab serum concentrations, regardless of the combination with immunomodulatory therapy.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/MEG.0000000000002835DOI Listing

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