Background and Aims: Golimumab has been approved recently to treat refractory moderate-to-severe ulcerative colitis [UC]. To date it is not clear why a considerable fraction of patients do not respond, or lose initial response, to golimumab therapy. Our aim was to investigate whether a low golimumab serum concentration and/or a positive anti-golimumab antibody status reduces the efficacy of this drug in patients with UC. Methods: Serum samples of 21 patients with moderate-to-severe UC were collected during the first 14 weeks of golimumab therapy. For measurement of golimumab serum concentrations, both a tumour necrosis factor [TNF]-coated enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay [ELISA] and a sandwich-type ELISA were developed. Anti-golimumab antibodies were measured using a bridging ELISA and a newly-developed drug-tolerant immunoassay. Clinical response and mucosal healing were assessed 14 weeks after start of treatment. Results: Out of 21 patients, 10 [48%] reached partial clinical response at Week 14. Median [interquartile range] serum golimumab concentration was significantly higher in partial clinical responders than in non-responders: 10.0 [7.8-10.5] μg/ml versus 7.4 [4.8-8.3] μg/ml at Week 2 [p = 0.035] and 5.1 [4.0-7.9] μg/ml versus 2.1 [1.8-4.2] μg/ml at week 6 [p = 0.037]. Four out of 21 UC patients developed anti-golimumab antibodies, detectable only using a drug-tolerant immunoassay, and three had a partial clinical response at that time. Clinical non-responders had a significantly more severe colitis, indicated by a higher endoscopic Mayo score at baseline compared with partial clinical responders [p = 0.048]. Conclusion: Adequate exposure to golimumab drives clinical response. A worse disease at baseline influences clinical response rate negatively.
CITATION STYLE
Detrez, I., Dreesen, E., Van Stappen, T., de Vries, A., Brouwers, E., Van Assche, G., … Gils, A. (2016). Variability in golimumab exposure: A “real-life” observational study in active ulcerative colitis. Journal of Crohn’s and Colitis, 10(5), 575–581. https://doi.org/10.1093/ecco-jcc/jjv241
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