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Indirect comparison of vedolizumab and adalimumab for biologic-naive patients with ulcerative colitis

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Version 2 2020-02-26, 11:43
Version 1 2019-02-08, 18:01
journal contribution
posted on 2020-02-26, 11:43 authored by Axel U. Dignass, Britta Siegmund, Ralf Goertz, Gundula Schneidewind, Lena Fanter

Aim: Indirect comparison of efficacy and safety of vedolizumab with adalimumab in biologic-naïve patients with moderate to severe ulcerative colitis (UC).

Methods: Vedolizumab is a gut-selective medication for moderate to severe UC. Since no comparative trials are available for direct comparison of vedolizumab vs adalimumab in UC, a systematic review of literature databases was conducted to identify randomized, placebo-controlled trials of the two drugs in patients with moderate to severe UC after failure of conventional treatment. Studies were screened for eligibility by two reviewers based on predefined inclusion criteria. Bucher’s adjusted indirect comparison was used to compare vedolizumab and adalimumab indirectly through placebo as common comparator.

Results: One vedolizumab study (GEMINI 1) and three adalimumab studies (ULTRA 1, ULTRA 2 and M10-447) met the eligibility criteria. Baseline characteristics of the included populations were similar in biologic-naïve UC patients across study arms. Although no statistically significant differences between treatments were found for induction efficacy endpoints, there was a trend toward a benefit of vedolizumab over adalimumab. There were also no significant differences between treatments for any maintenance efficacy endpoints, with no clear trend favoring either agent. Vedolizumab exhibited statistically superior maintenance safety compared with adalimumab, with significant reductions in risks of adverse events (relative risk 0.67 [95% confidence interval 0.57–0.80]; p < .0001), serious adverse events (0.20 [0.09–0.42]; p < .0001) and adverse events leading to discontinuation (0.14 [0.05–0.43]; p = .0006).

Conclusion: This analysis indicates that vedolizumab has comparable efficacy to adalimumab with improved safety in biologic-naïve patients with moderate to severe UC.

Trial registration:ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02497469.

Funding

Medical writing support was provided by BioScience Communications and AMS Advanced Medical Services GmbH, both supported by Takeda Pharmaceuticals International Co. Serap Sankoh (former Takeda employee) was the statistician who provided the post-hoc GEMINI 1 tables.

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