P679 What is the best strategy after failure to anti-TNF? Ustekinumab or other anti-TNF?

A. Cerpa Arencibia, C. Suarez Ferrer, J. Poza Cordón, E. Martín Arranz, L. Ramírez, M.D. Martín Arranz

Hospital La Paz, Gastroenterology, Madrid, Spain

Background

After the appearance of new biologics are more treatment options for first and second-line individualising according to the characteristics of each patient. The efficacy of a second anti-TNF is lower than the initial treatment so a more efficient strategy could change the therapeutic target.

Methods

We included patients with an established diagnosis of Crohn’s disease who were on second-line biological treatment (ustekinumab or anti-TNF) after failure of a first anti-TNF (adalimumab or infliximab) treatment. Only patients in whom the indication was the ‘induction of remission of inflammatory activity’ so those patients in whom the indication was different from the intestinal activity (intestinal manifestations, perianal disease etc.) were selected were not considered valid for analysis. Patients who had undergone intestinal resection alone were included in the study if the indication of second-line biologic treatment was already established and no recurrence prophylaxis thereof.

Results

A total of 56 patients with an established diagnosis of Crohn’s disease stable tracking unit EII La Paz Hospital who were treated with second-line ustekinumab (21 patients, 37.5%) or anti-TNF (35 patients were included, 62.5%) for remission induction. Baseline characteristics of patients and their IBD are summarised in Table 1. The duration of biological treatment at the time of analysis was 1.48 years (SD: 1.2) for ustekinumab group and 3.55 years (SD 3.3) for the anti-TNF group. Ustekinumab group in 16/21 (76.2%) achieved clinical remission, 3/21 (14.3%) had no response while achieving remission (note that in one patient occurred exitus otherwise cause adenocarcinoma páncreas- unable to properly assess drug response), 2/21 patients (9.5%) did not answer. In the group of anti-TNF, 15/35 patients (42.8%) achieved clinical remission, 12/35 patients (34.3%) had response without remission, 8/35 patients (22.9%) No response. These differences between groups reached statistical significance (p = 0.015). Among patients who achieved a response / clinical remission included those wherein assessed by endoscopy identifying intestinal activity no statistically significant differences between groups vs. anti-TNF ustekinumab both SESCD (average 2 vs. 6.3 p = 0, 39) to the Ruttgerts in (mean 2.5 vs. 2, p = 0.67) postsurgical stage. Regarding the response/biological remission found no significant differences in CRP between ustekinumab and anti-TNF (4.55 vs. 5.79, p = 0.68) or with fecal calprotectin (276.25 vs. 268.82, p = 0.94).

Conclusion

In our experience, the second-line treatment with ustekinumab after the failure of a first anti-TNF has better remission rates and response to treatment with a second anti-TNF.