Systematic review with meta-analysis: real-world effectiveness and safety of vedolizumab in patients with inflammatory bowel disease

Background Selective patient recruitment can produce discrepancies between clinical trial results and real-world effectiveness. Methods A systematic literature review and meta-analysis were conducted to assess vedolizumab real-world effectiveness and safety in patients with ulcerative colitis (UC) o...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of gastroenterology 2018-09, Vol.53 (9), p.1048-1064
Hauptverfasser: Schreiber, Stefan, Dignass, Axel, Peyrin-Biroulet, Laurent, Hather, Greg, Demuth, Dirk, Mosli, Mahmoud, Curtis, Rebecca, Khalid, Javaria Mona, Loftus, Edward Vincent
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background Selective patient recruitment can produce discrepancies between clinical trial results and real-world effectiveness. Methods A systematic literature review and meta-analysis were conducted to assess vedolizumab real-world effectiveness and safety in patients with ulcerative colitis (UC) or Crohn’s disease (CD). MEDLINE, MEDLINE In-Process, EMBASE, and Cochrane databases were searched for real-world studies of vedolizumab in adult patients with UC/CD reporting clinical response, remission, corticosteroid-free remission, UC/CD-related surgery or hospitalization, mucosal healing, or safety published from May 1, 2014–June 22, 2017. Response and remission rates were combined in random-effects meta-analyses. Results At treatment week 14, 32% of UC patients [95% confidence interval (CI) 27–39%] and 30% of CD patients (95% CI 25–34%) were in remission; and at month 12, 46% for UC (95% CI 37–56%) and 30% for CD (95% CI 20–42%). For UC, the rates of corticosteroid-free remission were 26% at week 14 (95% CI 20–34%) and 42% at month 12 (95% CI 31–53%); for CD they were 25% at week 14 (95%, CI 20–31%) and 31% at month 12 (95%, CI 20–45%). At month 12, 33–77% of UC and 6–63% of CD patients had mucosal healing. Nine percent of patients reported serious adverse events. Conclusions Vedolizumab demonstrated real-world effectiveness in patients with moderate-to-severely active UC or CD, with approximately one-half and one-third of patients, respectively, in remission at treatment month 12. These findings are consistent with clinical trial data and support the long-term benefit–risk profile of vedolizumab.
ISSN:0944-1174
1435-5922
DOI:10.1007/s00535-018-1480-0