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Maintenance Golimumab Treatment in Pediatric UC Patients With Moderately to Severely Active UC: PURSUIT PEDS PK Long-Term Study Results

BACKGROUND: Long-term safety, pharmacokinetics, and efficacy of open-label golimumab therapy in children with moderate–severe ulcerative colitis were evaluated. METHODS: Week-6 golimumab responders (Mayo score decrease of ≥30% and ≥3 points from baseline, rectal bleeding subscore of 0/1 or ≥1 decrea...

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Autores principales: Hyams, Jeffrey S, O’Brien, Christopher D, Padgett, Lakshmi, Rosh, Joel R, Turner, Dan, Veereman, Genevieve, Griffiths, Anne M, Heyman, Melvin B, Wahbeh, Ghassan, Adedokun, Omoniyi J, Strauss, Richard S, Lynch, John P, Chan, Daphne
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9802358/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36777743
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/crocol/otaa063
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author Hyams, Jeffrey S
O’Brien, Christopher D
Padgett, Lakshmi
Rosh, Joel R
Turner, Dan
Veereman, Genevieve
Griffiths, Anne M
Heyman, Melvin B
Wahbeh, Ghassan
Adedokun, Omoniyi J
Strauss, Richard S
Lynch, John P
Chan, Daphne
author_facet Hyams, Jeffrey S
O’Brien, Christopher D
Padgett, Lakshmi
Rosh, Joel R
Turner, Dan
Veereman, Genevieve
Griffiths, Anne M
Heyman, Melvin B
Wahbeh, Ghassan
Adedokun, Omoniyi J
Strauss, Richard S
Lynch, John P
Chan, Daphne
author_sort Hyams, Jeffrey S
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Long-term safety, pharmacokinetics, and efficacy of open-label golimumab therapy in children with moderate–severe ulcerative colitis were evaluated. METHODS: Week-6 golimumab responders (Mayo score decrease of ≥30% and ≥3 points from baseline, rectal bleeding subscore of 0/1 or ≥1 decrease from baseline) entered the long-term extension at week 14 and received maintenance therapy (subcutaneous, q4w). Patients ≥45 kg could receive at-home treatments at week 18. Pharmacokinetic, safety, and efficacy results were summarized through week 126 (2 years). RESULTS: Among 35 enrolled children, 21 (60%) responded at week 6 and 20 entered the long-term extension (median age of 14.5 years and median weight of 46.1 kg). Eleven of 20 patients (55%) completed 2 years of treatment. No anaphylactic or serum sickness-like reactions, opportunistic infections, malignancies, tuberculosis, or deaths occurred. The safety profile of golimumab from weeks 14 through 126 and that observed through week 14 was generally consistent. Median trough golimumab concentrations in evaluable patients were consistent from weeks 14 (1.39, interquartile range 0.67–3.60) through 102 (1.18, 0.78–2.16), but higher at week 110 (4.10, 1.30–4.81). The incidence of antigolimumab antibodies increased from 10% (2/20) at week 30 to 25.0% (5/20) at week 126; 1 patient had neutralizing antibodies. At week 110, 50% (10/20) of patients were in remission (ie, Pediatric Ulcerative Colitis Activity Index <10). Among all enrolled patients, 28.6% (10/35) achieved remission at week 110. CONCLUSIONS: Among children with ulcerative colitis who initially responded to golimumab induction and received q4w maintenance treatment in the long-term extension, 50% showed continued clinical benefit through 2 years. No new safety signals were observed.
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spelling pubmed-98023582023-02-10 Maintenance Golimumab Treatment in Pediatric UC Patients With Moderately to Severely Active UC: PURSUIT PEDS PK Long-Term Study Results Hyams, Jeffrey S O’Brien, Christopher D Padgett, Lakshmi Rosh, Joel R Turner, Dan Veereman, Genevieve Griffiths, Anne M Heyman, Melvin B Wahbeh, Ghassan Adedokun, Omoniyi J Strauss, Richard S Lynch, John P Chan, Daphne Crohns Colitis 360 Observations and Research BACKGROUND: Long-term safety, pharmacokinetics, and efficacy of open-label golimumab therapy in children with moderate–severe ulcerative colitis were evaluated. METHODS: Week-6 golimumab responders (Mayo score decrease of ≥30% and ≥3 points from baseline, rectal bleeding subscore of 0/1 or ≥1 decrease from baseline) entered the long-term extension at week 14 and received maintenance therapy (subcutaneous, q4w). Patients ≥45 kg could receive at-home treatments at week 18. Pharmacokinetic, safety, and efficacy results were summarized through week 126 (2 years). RESULTS: Among 35 enrolled children, 21 (60%) responded at week 6 and 20 entered the long-term extension (median age of 14.5 years and median weight of 46.1 kg). Eleven of 20 patients (55%) completed 2 years of treatment. No anaphylactic or serum sickness-like reactions, opportunistic infections, malignancies, tuberculosis, or deaths occurred. The safety profile of golimumab from weeks 14 through 126 and that observed through week 14 was generally consistent. Median trough golimumab concentrations in evaluable patients were consistent from weeks 14 (1.39, interquartile range 0.67–3.60) through 102 (1.18, 0.78–2.16), but higher at week 110 (4.10, 1.30–4.81). The incidence of antigolimumab antibodies increased from 10% (2/20) at week 30 to 25.0% (5/20) at week 126; 1 patient had neutralizing antibodies. At week 110, 50% (10/20) of patients were in remission (ie, Pediatric Ulcerative Colitis Activity Index <10). Among all enrolled patients, 28.6% (10/35) achieved remission at week 110. CONCLUSIONS: Among children with ulcerative colitis who initially responded to golimumab induction and received q4w maintenance treatment in the long-term extension, 50% showed continued clinical benefit through 2 years. No new safety signals were observed. Oxford University Press 2020-08-04 /pmc/articles/PMC9802358/ /pubmed/36777743 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/crocol/otaa063 Text en © The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) ), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Observations and Research
Hyams, Jeffrey S
O’Brien, Christopher D
Padgett, Lakshmi
Rosh, Joel R
Turner, Dan
Veereman, Genevieve
Griffiths, Anne M
Heyman, Melvin B
Wahbeh, Ghassan
Adedokun, Omoniyi J
Strauss, Richard S
Lynch, John P
Chan, Daphne
Maintenance Golimumab Treatment in Pediatric UC Patients With Moderately to Severely Active UC: PURSUIT PEDS PK Long-Term Study Results
title Maintenance Golimumab Treatment in Pediatric UC Patients With Moderately to Severely Active UC: PURSUIT PEDS PK Long-Term Study Results
title_full Maintenance Golimumab Treatment in Pediatric UC Patients With Moderately to Severely Active UC: PURSUIT PEDS PK Long-Term Study Results
title_fullStr Maintenance Golimumab Treatment in Pediatric UC Patients With Moderately to Severely Active UC: PURSUIT PEDS PK Long-Term Study Results
title_full_unstemmed Maintenance Golimumab Treatment in Pediatric UC Patients With Moderately to Severely Active UC: PURSUIT PEDS PK Long-Term Study Results
title_short Maintenance Golimumab Treatment in Pediatric UC Patients With Moderately to Severely Active UC: PURSUIT PEDS PK Long-Term Study Results
title_sort maintenance golimumab treatment in pediatric uc patients with moderately to severely active uc: pursuit peds pk long-term study results
topic Observations and Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9802358/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36777743
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/crocol/otaa063
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