Cargando…

Short-term anti-TNF therapy with surgical closure versus anti-TNF therapy alone for Crohn's perianal fistulas (PISA-II): long-term outcomes of an international, multicentre patient preference, randomised controlled trial

BACKGROUND: The PISA-II trial showed that short-term anti-tumour necrosis factor (anti-TNF) therapy followed by surgical closure induces radiological healing of perianal fistulas in patients with Crohn's disease more frequently than anti-TNF therapy alone after 18 months. This study aimed to co...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Meima - van Praag, Elise M., Becker, Marte A.J., van Rijn, Kyra L., Wasmann, Karin A.T.G.M., Stoker, Jaap, D'Haens, Geert R.A.M., Ponsioen, Cyriel Y., Gecse, Krisztina B., Dijkgraaf, Marcel G.W., Spinelli, Antonino, Danese, Silvio, Bemelman, Willem A., Buskens, Christianne J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10344824/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37457118
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eclinm.2023.102045
_version_ 1785072946148016128
author Meima - van Praag, Elise M.
Becker, Marte A.J.
van Rijn, Kyra L.
Wasmann, Karin A.T.G.M.
Stoker, Jaap
D'Haens, Geert R.A.M.
Ponsioen, Cyriel Y.
Gecse, Krisztina B.
Dijkgraaf, Marcel G.W.
Spinelli, Antonino
Danese, Silvio
Bemelman, Willem A.
Buskens, Christianne J.
author_facet Meima - van Praag, Elise M.
Becker, Marte A.J.
van Rijn, Kyra L.
Wasmann, Karin A.T.G.M.
Stoker, Jaap
D'Haens, Geert R.A.M.
Ponsioen, Cyriel Y.
Gecse, Krisztina B.
Dijkgraaf, Marcel G.W.
Spinelli, Antonino
Danese, Silvio
Bemelman, Willem A.
Buskens, Christianne J.
author_sort Meima - van Praag, Elise M.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The PISA-II trial showed that short-term anti-tumour necrosis factor (anti-TNF) therapy followed by surgical closure induces radiological healing of perianal fistulas in patients with Crohn's disease more frequently than anti-TNF therapy alone after 18 months. This study aimed to compare long-term outcomes of both treatment arms. METHODS: Follow-up data were collected from patients who participated in the PISA-II trial, an international patient preference randomised controlled trial. This multicentre trial was performed in nine hospitals in the Netherlands and one hospital in Italy. Patients with Crohn's disease above the age of 18 years with an active high perianal fistula and a single internal opening were asked to participate. Patients were allocated to anti-TNF therapy (intravenous infliximab, or subcutaneous adalimumab, at the discretion of the gastroenterologist) for one year, or surgical closure combined with 4-months anti-TNF therapy. Patients without a treatment preference were randomised (1:1) using random block randomisation (block sizes of six without stratification), and patients with a treatment preference were treated according to their preferred treatment arm. For the current follow-up study, data were collected until May 2022. Primary outcome was radiological healing on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), including all participants with a MRI made less than 6 months ago at the time of data collection. Analysis was based on observed data. FINDINGS: Between September 14, 2013, and December 7, 2019, 94 patients were enrolled in the trial. Long-term follow-up data were available in 91 patients (36/38 (95%) anti-TNF + surgical closure, 55/56 (98%) anti-TNF). A total of 14/36 (39%) patients in the surgical closure arm were randomly assigned, which was not significantly different in the anti-TNF treatment arm (16/55 (29%) randomly assigned). Median follow-up was 5.7 years (interquartile range (IQR) 5–7). Radiological healing occurred significantly more often after anti-TNF + surgical closure (15/36 = 42% versus 10/55 = 18%; P = 0.014). Clinical closure was comparable (26/36 = 72% versus 34/55 = 62%; P = 0.18) in both groups. However, clinical closure in the surgical group was achieved with less re-interventions 4/26 (= 15%) versus 18/34 (= 53%), including (redo-)surgical closure procedures. Recurrences occurred in 0/25 (0%) patients with radiological healing versus 27/76 (36%) patients with clinical closure, sometime during follow-up. Anti-TNF trough levels were higher in patients with long-term clinical closure in both groups (P = 0.031 and P = 0.014). In 6/11 (55%) patients in the anti-TNF group with available trough levels, recurrences were diagnosed within three months of a drop under 3.5ug/ml. 36 patients stopped anti-TNF, after which 0/14 (0%) patients with radiological healing developed a recurrence and 9/22 (41%) with clinical closure. Self-rated (in)continence was comparable between groups, and 79% (60/76) of patients indicated comparable/improved continence after treatment. Decision-regret analysis showed that all (30/30) anti-TNF + surgical closure patients agreed or strongly agreed that surgery was the right decision versus 78% (36/46) in the anti-TNF arm. All surgical closure patients would go for the same treatment again, whereas this was 89% (41/46) in the anti-TNF arm. INTERPRETATION: This study confirmed that surgical closure should be considered in amenable patients with perianal fistulas and Crohn's disease as long-term outcomes were favourable, and that radiological healing should be the aim of treatment as recurrences only occurred in patients without radiological healing. In patients with complete MRI closure, anti-TNF could be safely stopped. FUNDING: None.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10344824
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher Elsevier
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-103448242023-07-15 Short-term anti-TNF therapy with surgical closure versus anti-TNF therapy alone for Crohn's perianal fistulas (PISA-II): long-term outcomes of an international, multicentre patient preference, randomised controlled trial Meima - van Praag, Elise M. Becker, Marte A.J. van Rijn, Kyra L. Wasmann, Karin A.T.G.M. Stoker, Jaap D'Haens, Geert R.A.M. Ponsioen, Cyriel Y. Gecse, Krisztina B. Dijkgraaf, Marcel G.W. Spinelli, Antonino Danese, Silvio Bemelman, Willem A. Buskens, Christianne J. eClinicalMedicine Articles BACKGROUND: The PISA-II trial showed that short-term anti-tumour necrosis factor (anti-TNF) therapy followed by surgical closure induces radiological healing of perianal fistulas in patients with Crohn's disease more frequently than anti-TNF therapy alone after 18 months. This study aimed to compare long-term outcomes of both treatment arms. METHODS: Follow-up data were collected from patients who participated in the PISA-II trial, an international patient preference randomised controlled trial. This multicentre trial was performed in nine hospitals in the Netherlands and one hospital in Italy. Patients with Crohn's disease above the age of 18 years with an active high perianal fistula and a single internal opening were asked to participate. Patients were allocated to anti-TNF therapy (intravenous infliximab, or subcutaneous adalimumab, at the discretion of the gastroenterologist) for one year, or surgical closure combined with 4-months anti-TNF therapy. Patients without a treatment preference were randomised (1:1) using random block randomisation (block sizes of six without stratification), and patients with a treatment preference were treated according to their preferred treatment arm. For the current follow-up study, data were collected until May 2022. Primary outcome was radiological healing on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), including all participants with a MRI made less than 6 months ago at the time of data collection. Analysis was based on observed data. FINDINGS: Between September 14, 2013, and December 7, 2019, 94 patients were enrolled in the trial. Long-term follow-up data were available in 91 patients (36/38 (95%) anti-TNF + surgical closure, 55/56 (98%) anti-TNF). A total of 14/36 (39%) patients in the surgical closure arm were randomly assigned, which was not significantly different in the anti-TNF treatment arm (16/55 (29%) randomly assigned). Median follow-up was 5.7 years (interquartile range (IQR) 5–7). Radiological healing occurred significantly more often after anti-TNF + surgical closure (15/36 = 42% versus 10/55 = 18%; P = 0.014). Clinical closure was comparable (26/36 = 72% versus 34/55 = 62%; P = 0.18) in both groups. However, clinical closure in the surgical group was achieved with less re-interventions 4/26 (= 15%) versus 18/34 (= 53%), including (redo-)surgical closure procedures. Recurrences occurred in 0/25 (0%) patients with radiological healing versus 27/76 (36%) patients with clinical closure, sometime during follow-up. Anti-TNF trough levels were higher in patients with long-term clinical closure in both groups (P = 0.031 and P = 0.014). In 6/11 (55%) patients in the anti-TNF group with available trough levels, recurrences were diagnosed within three months of a drop under 3.5ug/ml. 36 patients stopped anti-TNF, after which 0/14 (0%) patients with radiological healing developed a recurrence and 9/22 (41%) with clinical closure. Self-rated (in)continence was comparable between groups, and 79% (60/76) of patients indicated comparable/improved continence after treatment. Decision-regret analysis showed that all (30/30) anti-TNF + surgical closure patients agreed or strongly agreed that surgery was the right decision versus 78% (36/46) in the anti-TNF arm. All surgical closure patients would go for the same treatment again, whereas this was 89% (41/46) in the anti-TNF arm. INTERPRETATION: This study confirmed that surgical closure should be considered in amenable patients with perianal fistulas and Crohn's disease as long-term outcomes were favourable, and that radiological healing should be the aim of treatment as recurrences only occurred in patients without radiological healing. In patients with complete MRI closure, anti-TNF could be safely stopped. FUNDING: None. Elsevier 2023-07-05 /pmc/articles/PMC10344824/ /pubmed/37457118 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eclinm.2023.102045 Text en © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Articles
Meima - van Praag, Elise M.
Becker, Marte A.J.
van Rijn, Kyra L.
Wasmann, Karin A.T.G.M.
Stoker, Jaap
D'Haens, Geert R.A.M.
Ponsioen, Cyriel Y.
Gecse, Krisztina B.
Dijkgraaf, Marcel G.W.
Spinelli, Antonino
Danese, Silvio
Bemelman, Willem A.
Buskens, Christianne J.
Short-term anti-TNF therapy with surgical closure versus anti-TNF therapy alone for Crohn's perianal fistulas (PISA-II): long-term outcomes of an international, multicentre patient preference, randomised controlled trial
title Short-term anti-TNF therapy with surgical closure versus anti-TNF therapy alone for Crohn's perianal fistulas (PISA-II): long-term outcomes of an international, multicentre patient preference, randomised controlled trial
title_full Short-term anti-TNF therapy with surgical closure versus anti-TNF therapy alone for Crohn's perianal fistulas (PISA-II): long-term outcomes of an international, multicentre patient preference, randomised controlled trial
title_fullStr Short-term anti-TNF therapy with surgical closure versus anti-TNF therapy alone for Crohn's perianal fistulas (PISA-II): long-term outcomes of an international, multicentre patient preference, randomised controlled trial
title_full_unstemmed Short-term anti-TNF therapy with surgical closure versus anti-TNF therapy alone for Crohn's perianal fistulas (PISA-II): long-term outcomes of an international, multicentre patient preference, randomised controlled trial
title_short Short-term anti-TNF therapy with surgical closure versus anti-TNF therapy alone for Crohn's perianal fistulas (PISA-II): long-term outcomes of an international, multicentre patient preference, randomised controlled trial
title_sort short-term anti-tnf therapy with surgical closure versus anti-tnf therapy alone for crohn's perianal fistulas (pisa-ii): long-term outcomes of an international, multicentre patient preference, randomised controlled trial
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10344824/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37457118
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eclinm.2023.102045
work_keys_str_mv AT meimavanpraagelisem shorttermantitnftherapywithsurgicalclosureversusantitnftherapyaloneforcrohnsperianalfistulaspisaiilongtermoutcomesofaninternationalmulticentrepatientpreferencerandomisedcontrolledtrial
AT beckermarteaj shorttermantitnftherapywithsurgicalclosureversusantitnftherapyaloneforcrohnsperianalfistulaspisaiilongtermoutcomesofaninternationalmulticentrepatientpreferencerandomisedcontrolledtrial
AT vanrijnkyral shorttermantitnftherapywithsurgicalclosureversusantitnftherapyaloneforcrohnsperianalfistulaspisaiilongtermoutcomesofaninternationalmulticentrepatientpreferencerandomisedcontrolledtrial
AT wasmannkarinatgm shorttermantitnftherapywithsurgicalclosureversusantitnftherapyaloneforcrohnsperianalfistulaspisaiilongtermoutcomesofaninternationalmulticentrepatientpreferencerandomisedcontrolledtrial
AT stokerjaap shorttermantitnftherapywithsurgicalclosureversusantitnftherapyaloneforcrohnsperianalfistulaspisaiilongtermoutcomesofaninternationalmulticentrepatientpreferencerandomisedcontrolledtrial
AT dhaensgeertram shorttermantitnftherapywithsurgicalclosureversusantitnftherapyaloneforcrohnsperianalfistulaspisaiilongtermoutcomesofaninternationalmulticentrepatientpreferencerandomisedcontrolledtrial
AT ponsioencyriely shorttermantitnftherapywithsurgicalclosureversusantitnftherapyaloneforcrohnsperianalfistulaspisaiilongtermoutcomesofaninternationalmulticentrepatientpreferencerandomisedcontrolledtrial
AT gecsekrisztinab shorttermantitnftherapywithsurgicalclosureversusantitnftherapyaloneforcrohnsperianalfistulaspisaiilongtermoutcomesofaninternationalmulticentrepatientpreferencerandomisedcontrolledtrial
AT dijkgraafmarcelgw shorttermantitnftherapywithsurgicalclosureversusantitnftherapyaloneforcrohnsperianalfistulaspisaiilongtermoutcomesofaninternationalmulticentrepatientpreferencerandomisedcontrolledtrial
AT spinelliantonino shorttermantitnftherapywithsurgicalclosureversusantitnftherapyaloneforcrohnsperianalfistulaspisaiilongtermoutcomesofaninternationalmulticentrepatientpreferencerandomisedcontrolledtrial
AT danesesilvio shorttermantitnftherapywithsurgicalclosureversusantitnftherapyaloneforcrohnsperianalfistulaspisaiilongtermoutcomesofaninternationalmulticentrepatientpreferencerandomisedcontrolledtrial
AT bemelmanwillema shorttermantitnftherapywithsurgicalclosureversusantitnftherapyaloneforcrohnsperianalfistulaspisaiilongtermoutcomesofaninternationalmulticentrepatientpreferencerandomisedcontrolledtrial
AT buskenschristiannej shorttermantitnftherapywithsurgicalclosureversusantitnftherapyaloneforcrohnsperianalfistulaspisaiilongtermoutcomesofaninternationalmulticentrepatientpreferencerandomisedcontrolledtrial