Cargando…

Long‐term safety and tolerability of oral tofacitinib in patients with Crohn’s disease: results from a phase 2, open‐label, 48‐week extension study

BACKGROUND: Tofacitinib is an oral, small molecule Janus kinase inhibitor that is being investigated for inflammatory bowel disease. AIMS: This 48‐week open‐label extension study primarily investigated long‐term safety of tofacitinib 5 and 10 mg b.d. and secondarily investigated efficacy as maintena...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Panés, Julián, D’Haens, Geert R., Higgins, Peter D. R., Mele, Linda, Moscariello, Michele, Chan, Gary, Wang, Wenjin, Niezychowski, Wojciech, Su, Chinyu, Maller, Eric
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6646954/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30663107
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/apt.15072
Descripción
Sumario:BACKGROUND: Tofacitinib is an oral, small molecule Janus kinase inhibitor that is being investigated for inflammatory bowel disease. AIMS: This 48‐week open‐label extension study primarily investigated long‐term safety of tofacitinib 5 and 10 mg b.d. and secondarily investigated efficacy as maintenance therapy in patients with Crohn's disease. METHODS: Patients who had completed the phase 2b maintenance study, or withdrawn due to treatment failure, were enrolled. Patients in remission (Crohn's disease activity index <150) at baseline received tofacitinib 5 mg b.d.; all others received 10 mg b.d. A single dose adjustment was allowed after 8 weeks’ fixed, open‐label treatment. RESULTS: Sixty‐two patients received tofacitinib 5 mg b.d.; 88 received 10 mg b.d. Both groups had similar rates of adverse events and serious infections. Crohn's disease worsening was the most frequent adverse event for tofacitinib 5 (33.9%) and 10 mg b.d. (19.3%). Patients not in remission at baseline, receiving 10 mg b.d., had higher rates of serious adverse events (19.3%) and discontinuation attributed to insufficient clinical response (30.7%) vs 5 mg b.d. (8.1% and 9.7%, respectively). At week 48, of patients with baseline remission receiving 5 mg b.d., 87.9% maintained remission and 75.0% sustained remission as observed (46.8% and 38.7%, respectively, by non‐responder imputation). Study design prevented between‐dose efficacy comparisons. CONCLUSIONS: No new safety signals emerged. Although both doses showed generally similar safety outcomes for overall adverse events, serious adverse events were more frequent for tofacitinib 10 than 5 mg b.d. Discontinuation due to insufficient clinical response was lower among patients in remission at baseline. ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT01470599.