Publication:
Adalimumab vs Azathioprine in the Prevention of Postoperative Crohn's Disease Recurrence. A GETECCU Randomised Trial.

No Thumbnail Available

Date

2017-04-11

Authors

Lopez-Sanroman, Antonio
Vera-Mendoza, Isabel
Domenech, Eugeni
Taxonera, Carlos
Vega-Ruiz, Vicente
Marín-Jimenez, Ignacio
Guardiola, Jordi
Castro, Luisa
Esteve, Maria
Iglesias, Eva

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Oxford University Press
Metrics
Google Scholar
Export

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

Postoperative recurrence of Crohn's disease [POR-CD] is almost certain if no prophylaxis is administered. Evidence for optimal treatment is lacking. Our aim was to compare the efficacy of adalimumab [ADA] and azathioprine [AZA] in this setting. We performed a phase 3, 52-week, multicentre, randomised, superiority study [APPRECIA], in which patients with ileocolonic resection were randomised either to ADA 160-80-40 mg subcutaneously [SC] or AZA 2.5 mg/kg/day, both associated with metronidazole. The primary endpoint was endoscopic recurrence at 1 year [Rutgeerts i2b, i3, i4], as evaluated by a blinded central reader. We recruited 91 patients [median age 35.0 years, disease duration 6.0 years, 23.8% smokers, 7.1% previous resections]. The study drugs were administered to 84 patients. Treatment was discontinued owing to adverse events in 11 patients [13.1%]. Discontinuation was significantly less frequent in the ADA [4.4%] than in the AZA group [23.2%] (dif.: 18.6% [95% CI 4.1-33.2], p = 0.011). According to the intention-to-treat analysis, therapy failed in 23/39 patients in the AZA group [59%] and 19/45 patients in the ADA group [42.2%] [p = 0.12]. In the per-protocol analysis [61 patients with centrally evaluable images], recurrence was recorded in 8/24 [33.3%] patients in the AZA and 11/37 [29.7%] in the ADA group [p = 0.76]. No statistically significant differences between the groups were found for recurrence in magnetic resonance images, biological markers of activity, surgical procedures, or hospital admissions. ADA has not demonstrated a better efficacy than AZA [both associated with metronidazole] for prophylaxis of POR-CD in an unselected population, although tolerance to ADA is significantly better.

Description

MeSH Terms

Adult
Crohn Disease
Female
Humans
Immunosuppressive Agents
Male
Postoperative Care
Secondary Prevention

DeCS Terms

Metronidazol
Enfermedad de Crohn
Azatioprina
Imagen por resonancia magnética
Fumadores
Procedimientos quirúrgicos operativos

CIE Terms

Keywords

Crohn’s disease, Adalimumab, Azathioprine

Citation

López-Sanromán A, Vera-Mendoza I, Domènech E, Taxonera C, Vega Ruiz V, Marín-Jiménez I, et al. Adalimumab vs Azathioprine in the Prevention of Postoperative Crohn's Disease Recurrence. A GETECCU Randomised Trial. J Crohns Colitis. 2017 Oct 27;11(11):1293-1301