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  • Title: Modeling of Treatment Outcomes with Tofacitinib Maintenance Therapy in Patients with Ulcerative Colitis: A Post Hoc Analysis of Data from the OCTAVE Clinical Program.
    Author: Chiorean M, Daperno M, Lees CW, Bonfanti G, Soudis D, Modesto I, Deuring JJ, Edwards RA.
    Journal: Adv Ther; 2023 Oct; 40(10):4440-4459. PubMed ID: 37525075.
    Abstract:
    INTRODUCTION: Tofacitinib is an oral small molecule Janus kinase inhibitor for the treatment of ulcerative colitis (UC). This post hoc analysis assessed whether various statistical techniques could predict outcomes of tofacitinib maintenance therapy in patients with UC. METHODS: Data from patients who participated in a 52-week, phase III maintenance study (OCTAVE Sustain) and an open-label long-term extension study (OCTAVE Open) were included in this analysis. Patients received tofacitinib 5 or 10 mg twice daily (BID) or placebo (OCTAVE Sustain only). Logistic regression analyses were performed to generate models using clinical and laboratory variables to predict loss of responder status at week 8 of OCTAVE Sustain, steroid-free remission (defined as a partial Mayo score of 0-1 in the absence of corticosteroid use) at week 52 of OCTAVE Sustain, and delayed response at week 8 of OCTAVE Open. Furthermore, differences in loss of response/discontinuation patterns between treatment groups in OCTAVE Sustain were established. RESULTS: The generated prediction models demonstrated insufficient accuracy for determining loss of response at week 8, steroid-free remission at week 52 in OCTAVE Sustain, or delayed response in OCTAVE Open. Both tofacitinib doses demonstrated comparable response/remission patterns based on visualizations of disease activity over time. The rectal bleeding subscore was the primary determinant of disease worsening (indicated by an increased total Mayo score), and the endoscopy subscore was the primary determinant of disease improvement (indicated by a decreased total Mayo score). CONCLUSION: Visualizations of disease activity subscores revealed distinct patterns among patients with UC that had disease worsening and disease improvement. The statistical models assessed in this analysis could not accurately predict loss of responder status, steroid-free remission, or delayed response to tofacitinib. Possible reasons include the small sample size or missing data related to yet unknown key variables that were not collected during these trials. Doctors use tofacitinib (Xeljanz®) to treat people with moderate to severe ulcerative colitis. Patients who respond to (have improved symptoms following) treatment with tofacitinib 10 mg twice a day for 8 weeks, or up to 16 weeks if they do not respond initially (known as induction treatment), can receive tofacitinib treatment at the lowest effective dose to sustain their response (called maintenance treatment). Predicting how patients respond to tofacitinib maintenance treatment may help clinicians work out the lowest effective dose for each patient. In this study, data from the tofacitinib clinical trials were used to assess the ability to predict maintenance therapy response or failure in patients with ulcerative colitis. Differences between patients who received tofacitinib 5 or 10 mg twice a day and who either stopped responding to treatment or stopped taking treatment were looked at. The study could not accurately predict which patients would experience disease worsening, steroid-free remission (very mild or no symptoms, and not taking steroids), or take longer to respond following tofacitinib maintenance treatment. Patterns of patients who had stopped responding to treatment, or stopped taking treatment, were similar between patients who received tofacitinib 5 or 10 mg twice daily. When reviewed using doctor- and patient-reported scores that measure ulcerative colitis disease activity, different factors were important in patients with disease worsening compared with disease improvement. The results suggest that further research is needed to more accurately predict how patients with ulcerative colitis will respond to tofacitinib maintenance treatment.
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