Guest guest Posted December 15, 2001 Report Share Posted December 15, 2001 American College of Gastroenterology 66th Annual Scientific Meeting Day 1 - October 22, 2001 Clinical Research Advances in Ulcerative Colitis Bret A. Lashner, MD Introduction The 66th Annual Meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology offered a forum for the exchange of ideas regarding the treatment and epidemiology of ulcerative colitis. Interesting insights were presented on the use of infliximab for an unapproved indication, 5-aminosalicylic acid (5-ASA), experimental therapies, ileal pouch-anal anastomosis concerns, and epidemiologic associations. In all, there was much to learn about ulcerative colitis. Infliximab for Ulcerative Colitis Infliximab* has not been approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration for use in ulcerative colitis, and therefore physicians have been reluctant to use this medication off-label. National meetings offer investigators an opportunity to present their experience, which hopefully will entice the manufacturer to study it and expand the indication. Su and colleagues[1] from the University of Pennsylvania presented their collaborative experience with others from Atlanta, Georgia; New York, NY; and Park Ridge, Illinois, using infliximab in 28 ulcerative colitis patients. Nineteen (67%) patients responded and 13 (46%) went into remission after a single infusion. Steroid reduction was seen in 90% of steroid-dependent patients. Patients with steroid-refractory disease were less likely to respond than other patients (33% vs 84%). The median time-to-response was 4 days, and the median time-to-relapse was 8 weeks. Chey and associates[2] treated 31 ulcerative colitis patients with infliximab and found an excellent response in 27 (87%). Remissions lasted from 3 to 30 months and 24 of 28 steroid-treated patients were successfully weaned. Fleisher and colleagues[3] found that 13 of 17 (76%) patients achieved remission by 8 weeks. Also, a patient in Rochester, New York, with ulcerative colitis and consumptive coagulopathy (decreased platelets, increased prothrombin time, and decreased D-dimers and fibrin degradation products) was successfully treated with infliximab.[4] Response in ulcerative colitis, however, does not appear to be related to serum tumor necrosis factor (TNF) levels.[5] Investigators from Phoenix, Arizona, showed that 3 of 4 ulcerative colitis patients responded to infliximab, but none had increased serum TNF levels before therapy. Certainly, there was promising experience presented at this meeting to encourage a definitive randomized clinical trial. Treatment Strategies With 5-Aminosalicylic Acid After more than 50 years, we are still learning about the use of 5-ASA agents in ulcerative colitis. Loftus and colleagues[6] from the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, presented their experience with a population-based cohort of 63 ulcerative colitis patients who received steroids as initial therapy for their disease. Complete or partial short-term response was seen in 38 of 42 (90%) patients who received 5-ASA therapy within 14 days of steroid initiation compared with 15 of 21 (71%) patients who did not receive 5-ASA. More patients given 5-ASA therapy for at least 5 months had a prolonged response (63%) than patients not given maintenance 5-ASA (32%). Yang and coworkers[7] from the University of Pennsylvania found that balsalazide could be used as " salvage " therapy for 5-ASA intolerance or failure. Of 17 ulcerative colitis patients who did not respond (13 patients) or were intolerant (4 patients) of other 5-ASA agents, 5 (29%) responded to balsalazide 6.75 g/day within 7 days. There was no intolerance to balsalazide. Treatment Strategies With Investigational Therapies* There is great interest among clinical investigators and pharmaceutical companies to find new therapies that are effective and less toxic than available agents. APC-2059 Axys Pharmaceuticals (South San Francisco, California) is developing a tryptase inhibitor (APC-2059) to decrease the proinflammatory effects of tryptase, a serine protease, released from mast cells in ulcerative colitis patients. Tremaine[8] from the Mayo Clinic, on behalf of a large consortium of academic centers, presented the results of APC-2059 given as 20 mg subcutaneously twice daily for 28 days to 56 ulcerative colitis patients. Sixteen (29%) responded, including 5 of whom went into remission; an additional 11 patients improved. The principal side effect was injection-site-related. Granulocyte Apheresis Naganuma and colleagues[9] compared intravenous cyclosporine A with granulocyte apheresis in 35 steroid-resistant or steroid-dependant ulcerative colitis patients. In the cyclosporine group, there was a 44% remission rate, a 56% response rate, and 43% had adverse effects as compared with 35% remission, 53% response, and no adverse effects in the granulocyte apheresis group. Kanke and coworkers[10] treated 23 ulcerative colitis patients with 5 sessions of apheresis. Nine of 15 (60%) patients with severely active disease improved and steroids were tapered in 2 steroid-dependant patients. Although there were no remissions reported, this therapy is worth considering. sPLA2 Lilly Research Laboratories (Indianapolis, Indiana) presented their study using a secreted phospholipase A2 (sPLA2) inhibitor for treatment of ulcerative colitis.[11] (sPLA2 is inhibited by steroids.) In this placebo-controlled randomized clinical trial, the drug was given orally for 8 weeks to 44 patients. The study was terminated after only 22 patients completed the course because no therapeutic effect was seen. Adverse effects were similar among the 2 patient groups. Rebamipide Rebamipide (also known as OPC-12759), is currently under development by Otsuka America Pharmaceuticals (Rockville, land). Rebamipide is a quinolone derivative with the ability to protect the gastrointestinal tract from the harmful effects of reactive oxygen species. Farhadi and colleagues[12] from Rush University in Chicago, Illinois, showed that neutrophils from ulcerative colitis patients have a decreased inhibition of fMLP (formyl-leucyl-methionyl-phenylalanine)-induced respiratory bursts and that this effect is reduced with rebamipide. In theory then, rebamipide could be effective in ulcerative colitis as an oral or topical agent. Ileal Pouches Patients with ulcerative colitis who do not respond to medical therapy or who develop colorectal cancer or dysplasia often are offered total proctocolectomy with ileal pouch-anal anastomosis (TPC-IPAA). Mahadavan and colleagues[13] from the Mayo Clinic examined the rate of postsurgical complications related to immunosuppressive therapy. Complications were found in 26% (12/46) of patients treated preoperatively with azathioprine or 6-mercaptopurine, 33% (4/12) of patients treated with cyclosporine, and 32% (49/151) of patients not given immunosuppression. A high complication rate was seen with steroid treatment and increased severity of ulcerative colitis. Azathioprine, 6-mercaptopurine, or cyclosporine does not appear to increase the postsurgical complication rate. As reported by Quinn and Fazio[14] from the Cleveland Clinic in Cleveland, Ohio, the quality of life, regardless of scoring system used, is good following TPC-IPAA and better in men and younger patients. High self-esteem is the most important independent determinant of a good quality of life. The diarrhea that occurs in some patients following TPC-IPAA may not be due to an inflammation of the pouch. Shen and colleagues,[15] also from Cleveland Clinic, found that only 52% of 50 consecutive patients presenting with diarrhea had pouchitis. The remainder of the patients had inflammation of the cuff (cuffitis; seen in 8%) and a normal-appearing pouch, labeled by these investigators as the irritable pouch syndrome (seen in 40%). Approximately 45% of patients with the irritable pouch syndrome respond to anticholinergic, antidiarrheal, and/or antidepressants -- a response rate that is similar to that found in patients with irritable bowel syndrome. Therefore, when a patient with TPC-IPAA presents with diarrhea, should that patient be treated with antibiotics, and, if he/she does not respond, be endoscoped to confirm the diagnosis? Or should the patient be endoscoped initially and treated according to the endoscopic and histologic findings? Shen and colleagues[16] performed a decision analysis to see which of these strategies was most cost-effective. Interesting to note was that the cost per correct diagnosis was similar for the 2 approaches. The test-then-treat strategy was recommended because it reduces the diagnostic delay and therefore avoids unnecessary antibiotics in some patients. In order to determine whether TPC-IPAA patients were at risk for developing cancer or dysplasia, Gorfine and associates[17] from Mount Sinai Medical School in New York biopsied 118 patients who were more than 1 year postsurgery. None of the patients developed cancer or dysplasia, but 1 had indefinite dysplasia in 2 locations. Dysplasia and cancer do not appear to present an important risk in TPC-IPAA patients. Epidemiology Many diverse epidemiologic studies of ulcerative colitis patients were presented during these annual meeting proceedings. Adherence to Medical Therapy Kane[18] from the University of Chicago examined adherence rates to medical therapy for ulcerative colitis from a national (prescription-based) database of 27,328 prescriptions of 5-ASA drugs. Adherence, defined as possession of at least 75% of the prescribed drug over a 1-year period, ranged from 71% to 77%, depending on the drug formulation. Rectal formulation was associated with low adherence rates and acquisition via mail-order prescription service; female sex and younger age were associated with higher adherence rates. Certainly adherence to medical therapy for ulcerative colitis patients is lower than suspected. Surveillance Colonoscopy Cancer surveillance colonoscopy for detection of dysplasia has become the standard of care for ulcerative colitis patients. Sprung and Lundberg[19] questioned this standard. Among 319 ulcerative colitis patients in their practice, the only individual who developed cancer had no dysplasia found on a surveillance colonoscopy 1 year earlier. None of the 20 patients who developed low-grade dysplasia went on to develop cancer (only 2 had surgery) and no patient was detected with high-grade dysplasia. Furthermore, all follow-up colonoscopies of patients with low-grade dysplasia had no dysplasia detected. Is dysplasia actually reversible? Was follow-up long enough in these patients with low-grade dysplasia? Was the pathology confirmed to be true low-grade dysplasia? These provocative questions need to be addressed before the standard of care is altered. hMLH1 Mismatch Repair Gene Mutation Bagnoli and colleagues[20] studied a specific mutation on exon 8 of the hMLH1 mismatch repair gene on chromosome 3p. Of interest, the mutation was present in 40% of ulcerative colitis patients whose disease was either refractory to steroids or steroid-dependent. Only 13.4% of other ulcerative colitis patients and 9.8% of controls were positive for the mutation. This provocative finding may be used in the future to predict or understand the natural history of disease. Selective Cyclooxygenase-2 Inhibitors Controversy exists about the use of selective cyclooxygenase-2 inhibitors in the setting of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). In a series by Mahadevan and colleagues[21] from the Mayo Clinic, only 2 of 27 IBD patients who used these drugs had exacerbation of their disease. Therefore, these drugs appear to be safe. Bone Mineral Density and Hypercoagulation Toth and coworkers[22] determined that dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) was very sensitive in detecting osteopenia and osteoporosis among ulcerative colitis patients who had been treated with steroid therapy. Alternatively, quantitative ultrasound was not sufficiently sensitive to detect differences in bone mineral density between ulcerative colitis patients who had taken steroids and those who had never taken steroids. Shah and associates[23] showed that hypercoagulability was common among 11 IBD patients; 7 had IgM anticardiolipin antibodies and 1 had a lupus anticoagulant. Furthermore, hypercoagulability, and not cumulative steroid dose, was associated with osteonecrosis seen on magnetic resonance imaging. Conclusion A wide range of topical issues related to ulcerative colitis was addressed during these scientific sessions. Clinical investigators and pharmaceutical companies each perceive this meeting as being an important vehicle for the dissemination of timely information to the clinical gastroenterology community. Indeed, our understanding of the natural history and treatment of ulcerative colitis has been advanced following these proceedings, and future meetings are likely to build on this new information. * The United States Food and Drug Administration has not approved this medication for this use. References Su CG, Salzberg B, J, et al. Efficacy of anti-tumor necrosis factor therapy in patients with ulcerative colitis. Am J Gastroenterol. 2001;96:S310. Chey WY, Kunze GY, Shah AN. Observations on therapeutic effect of infliximab on ulcerative colitis. Am J Gastroenterol. 2001;96:S288. Fleisher MR, Rubin SD, Levine AE, et al. Infliximab in the treatment of steroid-naive ulcerative colitis. Am J Gastroenterol. 2001;96:S291-292. Qutob TS, Mantry P, Decross A, Shah A. Consumptive coagulopathy in an ulcerative colitis: a case that responded to treatment with infliximab. Am J Gastroenterol. 2001;96:S306. J, Shernoff NJ, FC. The role of serum TNF in predicting response to infliximab therapy in patients with active IBD. Am J Gastroenterol. 2001;96:S289. Loftus EV, Faubion WA, Sandborn WJ. Outcome of combination therapy with sulfasalazine or 5-aminosalicylates and corticosteroids in a population-based cohort of patients with inflammatory bowel disease. Am J Gastroenterol. 2001;96:S299. Yang Y-X, Su CG, Deren J, et al. Balsalazide as salvage therapy for mesalamine failure/intolerance in patients with ulcerative colitis. Am J Gastroenterol. 2001;96:S313-S314. Tremaine WJ, Brzezinski A, Katz JA, et al. Treatment of mildly to moderately active ulcerative colitis with a tryptase inhibitor (APC2059): an open-label pilot study. Am J Gastroenterol. 2001;96:S311-S312. Naganuma M, Hibi T, Iwao Y, et al. Treatment options of intravenous cyclosporine A and granulocytapheresis for ulcerative colitis. Am J Gastroenterol. 2001;96:S301-S302. Kanke K, Hiraishi H, Nakano M, et al. Treatment of ulcerative colitis by granulocyte apheresis. Am J Gastroenterol. 2001;96:S295. Lashner BA, Korzenik J, Dmitrienko A, et al. Safety and efficacy of an sPLA2 inhibitor in treating ulcerative colitis. Am J Gastroenterol. 2001;96:S297. Farhadi A, Keshavarzian A, Fitzpatrick LR, et al. The modulatory effects of plasma and colonic milieu of patients with ulcerative colitis on OPC antioxidant. Am J Gastroenterol. 2001;96:S290. Mahadevan U, Loftus EV, Tremaine WJ, et al. Preoperative azathioprine/6-mercaptopurine use is not associated with increased complications following proctocolectomy and ileal pouch anal anastomosis for ulcerative colitis. Am J Gastroenterol. 2001;96:S300. Quinn MT, Fazio VW, Quality of life of patients with mucosal ulcerative colitis following ileal pouch-anal anastomosis. Am J Gastroenterol. 2001;96:S293. Shen B, Lashner BA, Achkar J-P, et al. Irritable pouch syndrome is a common diagnosis in symptomatic patients with ileal pouch-anal anastomosis. Am J Gastroenterol. 2001;96:S308. Shen B, Lashner BA, Achkar J-P, et al. Diagnostic strategies in symptomatic patients with ileal pouch-anal anastomosis: a cost-effectiveness analysis. Am J Gastroenterol. 2001;96:S307-S308. Gorfine SR, Bauer JJ, Nilubol N, et al. In search of ileal mucosal dysplasia: a prospective study of 138 pelvic pouch patients recalled one or more years following restorative proctocolectomy. Am J Gastroenterol. 2001;96:S292. Kane SV. National adherence rates with IBD therapy: PO vs PR. Am J Gastroenterol. 2001;96:S296. Sprung DJ, Lundberg K. Do surveillance colonic biopsies in patients with ulcerative colitis prevent cancer in a community setting? Am J Gastroenterol. 2001;96:S309. Bagnoli S, Ortolani C, Papi L, et al. Refractory ulcerative colitis is associated with the hMLH1 mismatch repair gene. Am J Gastroenterol. 2001;96:S286-S287. Mahadevan U, Loftus EV, Tremaine WJ, et al. Safety of selective cyclooxygenase-2 inhibitors in IBD. Am J Gastroenterol. 2001;96:S300-S301. Toth M, Miheller P, Zagoni T, et al. Bone mineral density measured by DEXA and quantitative ultrasonography in patients with ulcerative colitis. Am J Gastroenterol. 2001;96:S311. Shah SA, Nugent A, Patel S, et al. Hypercoagulability and osteonecrosis of the femoral head in patients with inflammatory bowel disease. Am J Gastroenterol. 2001;96:S307. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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