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  • Aden, K  (3)
  • 2020-2024  (3)
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  • 2020-2024  (3)
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  • 1
    In: Journal of Crohn's and Colitis, Oxford University Press (OUP), Vol. 16, No. Supplement_1 ( 2022-01-21), p. i203-i204
    Abstract: Independent assessments of histologic and endoscopic scores are two commonly used parameters as therapeutic endpoints in ulcerative colitis. However, our individual goal for patients is to achieve (long-term) disease-control. It has been recently shown that the individual combination of histologic and endoscopic remission is related to favorable long-term outcomes1. However, real world evidence for the benefit of using combined endoscopic and histologic remission endpoints is scarce. Methods We collected data from a retrospective cohort study of n=398 patients with active UC who underwent clinical assessment and routine colonoscopy. All patients donated data and biomaterials at the University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein (Kiel) using the broad consent2. The patients were observed over a minimum of 6 months and three individual outcomes were pre-defined as outcome-endpoints: i) therapy escalation (systemic steroids/new targeted MoA), ii) long-term hospitalization and iii) IBD-related surgery. Results 398 UC patients (female: n=166, 41.7%, male: n=232, 58.29% with a median age of 47 years at time of routine colonoscopy) were analyzed. We observed therapy escalation in 134 cases (42.27%), hospitalization in 70 cases (21.21%) and IBD-related surgery in 34 cases (10.66%). Remission at the time of colonoscopy was assessed by endoscopic Mayo (eMayo=0) or Nancy-Index (=0) and used for prediction of long-term outcome.We investigated the benefit of combined endoscopic and histologic remission on long-term outcome by comparing a combination of both eMayo=0 and Nancy=0 against eMayo=0 and Nancy & gt;0. Patients with combined histologic and endoscopic remission show a significantly reduced hazard ratio for all three outcome endpoints, such as therapy escalation (HR 0.20, CI 0.10–0.39, p & lt;0.001), hospitalization (HR 0.24, CI 0.09–0.59, p=0.002) and IBD-related surgery (HR 0.20, CI 0.05–0.84, p=0.028). Conclusion We show that the combined assessment of endoscopic and histologic remission substantially increases the identification of patients with favorable long-term outcome in UC. However, even in patients with combined endoscopic and histologic remission approx. 20% underwent therapy escalation within 6-month period. These data highlight the need of combined endpoints using histology, endoscopy and probably other parameters (e.g. inflammatory biomarkers, patient reported outcomes) to define disease control and predict favorable disease trajectories in the future course of patients with UC.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 1873-9946 , 1876-4479
    Language: English
    Publisher: Oxford University Press (OUP)
    Publication Date: 2022
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Oxford University Press (OUP) ; 2021
    In:  Journal of Crohn's and Colitis Vol. 15, No. Supplement_1 ( 2021-05-27), p. S456-S457
    In: Journal of Crohn's and Colitis, Oxford University Press (OUP), Vol. 15, No. Supplement_1 ( 2021-05-27), p. S456-S457
    Abstract: Long-term real-life data on the efficacy of the Janus kinase inhibitor tofacitinib in moderate-to-severe ulcerative colitis (UC) are limited. We here report efficacy of tofacitinib in refractory UC patients with an emphasis on endoscopic and histologic outcome. Methods Fifty-four consecutive UC patients (Mayo endoscopic sub-score ≥2) initiating tofacitinib in 2 tertiary IBD referral centres were prospectively included (Table 1). Almost all were refractory to both anti-TNF (96.4%) and vedolizumab (92.7%) and received tofacitinib in standard dosage. Steroid-free clinical remission was defined as partial Mayo score of ≤2 with no single sub-score & gt;1 and without any steroid exposure at assessment. Biological remission was defined as faecal calprotectin & lt;250mcg/g, endoscopic remission as Mayo endoscopic sub-score of 0, endoscopic improvement as Mayo endoscopic sub-score of ≤1, and histologic remission as Nancy histology index of 0. A combination of endoscopic and histologic remission was referred as mucosal healing. All outcomes were assessed at year 1. Non-responder imputation and last observation carried forward analysis were applied. Results Patients were followed for a median [IQR] of 91.7 [67.2–102.4] weeks, with an exposure to tofacitinib of 23.9 [14.6–51.6] weeks. By year one, 31.5% of patients were in steroid-free clinical remission (Figure 1). Biological remission was observed in 26.9% of patients. Endoscopic improvement, endoscopic remission, histologic remission and mucosal healing, were observed in 31.5%, 24.1%, 22.0% and 18.0% of patients, respectively. Multivariate analysis identified baseline Mayo endoscopic sub score (OR 0.03, p=0.03); endoscopic improvement by week 16 (OR 36.5, p=0.008) and disease extent (OR 0.11, p=0.05) as independent predictors for endoscopic remission at year 1. Patients with left-sided colitis or proctitis experienced higher endoscopic remission rates (33.3% and 25.0%) then patients with extensive colitis (10.5%, p=0.09; p=0.6). Ultimately, 61.1% of all patients discontinued tofacitinib therapy after a median of 15.9 [9.2–24.5] weeks, due to primary non-response (n=25), loss-of-response (n=6) or (serious) adverse events (n=2). Thirteen patients (24.1%) required colectomy. During follow-up, no venous thrombo-embolisms or cancers were observed. One patient had to be admitted at ICU due to several life-threatening opportunistic infections. Conclusion In this highly refractory cohort of UC patients, tofacitinib induced and maintained endoscopic and histologic remission in up to one quarter of patients. UC patients with moderate left-sided colitis and proctitis had a numeric higher likelihood for a sustained effect than patients with extensive colitis.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 1873-9946 , 1876-4479
    Language: English
    Publisher: Oxford University Press (OUP)
    Publication Date: 2021
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2389631-0
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 3
    In: Journal of Crohn's and Colitis, Oxford University Press (OUP), Vol. 16, No. Supplement_1 ( 2022-01-21), p. i284-i284
    Abstract: Histological disease severity assessment in ulcerative colitis has become a mainstay in clinical endpoints definition (“histologic remission”) in clinical trials of ulcerative colitis (UC). Among the several scores that were developed for the microscopical assessment of disease activity, the Nancy index (NI) stands out for the least amount of work load due to the lowest number of scoring items. To which extent histologic assessment using NI is affected by interobserver reliability in the real word setting, is poorly understood. We therefore performed a single-center retrospective analysis of NI assessment in patients with ulcerative colitis. Methods We retrospectively evaluated in two independent cohorts with a total of n=1085 of biopsy samples (sigmoid, rectum) taken from 547 clinically diagnosed UC patients, who underwent colonoscopy between 2007 and 2020. Cohort #1 consisted of 637 biopsies from 312 patients, Cohort #2 consisted of 448 biopsies from 235 patients. The NI of these samples were assessed by two blinded pathologists with a different amount of pathological experience. After each cohort a consensus conference was held where samples that were rated with different NI grades were re-assessed, and a consensual score was given by both observers. We evaluated interobserver reliability and differences in the amount of the several grades of the NI rated by the observers. Results The interobserver-agreement of the NI was very-good after the assessment of the 1085 samples (κ = 0,687 [95%-CI: 0,653-0,720]). An improvement of the interobserver-agreement was found with growing numbers of samples evaluated by both observers (1st cohort: κ = 0,659 [95%-CI: 0,615-0,704] ; 2nd cohort: κ = 0,726 [95%-CI: 0,675-0,776]). The biggest number of differences were in NI grade 1 (observer 1: n=128; observer 2: n=236). The smallest number of differences were in NI grades 0 (observer 1: n=504; observer 2: n=479) and 3 (observer 1: n=71; observer 2: n=66). After a consensual score was given the largest part of grades were NI grade 0 (n=504) followed by NI grade 2 (n=309). The least number of samples were given NI grade 3 (n=62). Average time for scoring was less than 2 minutes. Conclusion The NI represents an easy-to-use index with very high interobserver reliability to assess the histological disease activity of UC patients in a real-world setting. Though further improvements of the NI regarding stricter classifications of the several grades need to be done to improve the practicability of the index. While NI grades 0 and 3 having a very high level of agreement between the observers, NI grade 1 has a lower agreement-level. This highlights the clinical need to specify histological characteristic leading to NI grade 1.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 1873-9946 , 1876-4479
    Language: English
    Publisher: Oxford University Press (OUP)
    Publication Date: 2022
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2389631-0
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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