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Subcutaneous Interval Lengthening of Vedolizumab for Economic Research
Sponsor: Academisch Medisch Centrum - Universiteit van Amsterdam (AMC-UvA)
Summary
Rationale: Subcutaneous vedolizumab is an effective maintenance therapy for patients with inflammatory bowel disease. Patients using subcutaneous vedolizumab (every 2 weeks) have higher vedolizumab serum trough concentrations than those who are treated with intravenous vedolizumab (every 4-8 weeks). Since biologic therapies such as vedolizumab are expensive, lengthening of the injection interval (de-escalation) is of interest to reduce health care costs. However, maintaining remission while extending vedolizumab injection intervals has not been evaluated yet but represents a critical component of both medical and societal costs. Studies have suggested that higher vedolizumab serum concentrations are associated with superior clinical outcomes. Our strategy is to administer subcutaneous vedolizumab with prolonged intervals using therapeutic drug monitoring, i.e. dose based on vedolizumab concentrations, to reduce medical and societal costs while preserving remission. Objectives: To evaluate whether subcutaneous vedolizumab therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM)-guided de-escalation will be cost-effective, compared to normal dosing regimen in patients with inflammatory bowel disease in remission. The secondary objective is to investigate the efficacy of TDM-guided de-escalation subcutaneous vedolizumab dosing compared to standard dosing. Study design: This is a single-centre, randomized controlled, open-label pilot study. Study population: 40 patients with inflammatory bowel disease (Crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis) in steroid-free clinical and biochemical remission with subcutaneous vedolizumab maintenance therapy of 108 mg every other week for at least 6 months. Intervention: Patients will be randomized (1:1) to the 'TDM-guided subcutaneous vedolizumab de-escalation' strategy versus 'standard care' (e.g. continuing standard subcutaneous vedolizumab dosing regimen of 108 mg every other week). Main study parameters/endpoints: Primary endpoint: cost-effectiveness of the TDM-guided de-escalation group compared to the standard dosing group over 48 weeks. Secondary endpoints include: proportion of patients with sustained clinical remission (based on Harvey-Bradshaw Index or Simple Clinical Colitis Activity Index), proportion of patients with (sustained) biochemical remission (based on c-reactive protein and fecal calprotectin), pharmacokinetic differences (vedolizumab levels and immunogenicity), safety and quality of life (measured by SIBDQ and EQ-5D-5L).
Official title: Subcutaneous Vedolizumab Drug De-escalation Using Therapeutic Drug Monitoring in Inflammatory Bowel Disease: a Randomized Controlled Pilot Study
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
40
Start Date
2023-02-09
Completion Date
2026-02-01
Last Updated
2024-09-04
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Vedolizumab Injection
Based on therapeutic drug monitoring, patients could be de-escalated based on a pharmacokinetic model: Dosing interval Trough Target 20 mg/L Adjust dosing interval to: 2 weeks \< 33 mg/L 2 weeks 2 weeks 33 - 46 mg/L 3 weeks 2 weeks ≥ 46 mg/L 4 weeks 3 weeks \< 20 mg/L 2 weeks 3 weeks 20 - 29 mg/L 3 weeks 3 weeks ≥ 29 mg/L 4 weeks 4 weeks \< 13 mg/L 2 weeks 4 weeks 13 - 20 mg/L 3 weeks Version number: 6.1, 24-06-2024 22 of 44 4 weeks ≥ 20 mg/L 4 week
Locations (1)
Amsterdam UMC
Amsterdam, Netherlands