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1 "Michael A Kamm"
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Original Article
Adalimumab induction and maintenance therapy achieve clinical remission and response in Chinese patients with Crohn's disease
Kai-Chun Wu, Zhi Hua Ran, Xiang Gao, Minhu Chen, Jie Zhong, Jian-Qiu Sheng, Michael A Kamm, Simon Travis, Kori Wallace, Nael M Mostafa, Marisa Shapiro, Yao Li, Roopal B Thakkar, Anne M Robinson
Intest Res 2016;14(2):152-163.   Published online April 27, 2016
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5217/ir.2016.14.2.152
AbstractAbstract PDFSupplementary MaterialPubReaderePub
<b>Background/Aims</b><br/>

This was a Phase 2 study (NCT02015793) to evaluate the pharmacokinetics, safety, and efficacy of adalimumab in Chinese patients with Crohn's disease (CD).

Methods

Thirty, adult Chinese patients with CD (CD Activity Index [CDAI] 220–450; high-sensitivity [hs]-C-reactive protein [CRP] ≥3 mg/L) received double-blind adalimumab 160/80 mg or 80/40 mg at weeks 0/2, followed by 40 mg at weeks 4 and 6. An open-label extension period occurred from weeks 8–26; patients received 40 mg adalimumab every other week. Serum adalimumab concentration and change from baseline in fecal calprotectin (FC) were measured during the double-blind period. Clinical remission (CDAI <150), response (decrease in CDAI ≥70 points from baseline), and change from baseline in hs-CRP were assessed through week 26. Nonresponder imputation was used for missing categorical data and last observation carried forward for missing hs-CRP/FC values. No formal hypothesis was tested. Adverse events were monitored.

Results

Mean adalimumab serum concentrations during the induction phase were 13.9–18.1 µg/mL (160/80 mg group) and 7.5−9.5 µg/mL (80/40 mg group). During the double-blind period, higher remission/response rates and greater reductions from baseline in hs-CRP and FC were observed with adalimumab 160/80 mg compared to that with 80/40 mg. Adverse event rates were similar among all treatment groups.

Conclusions

Adalimumab serum concentrations in Chinese patients with CD were comparable to those observed previously in Western and Japanese patients. Clinically meaningful remission rates and improvement in inflammatory markers were achieved with both dosing regimens; changes occurred rapidly with adalimumab 160/80 mg induction therapy. No new safety signals were reported.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
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    Sisi Zhou, Zeyu Huang, Wenjing Hou, Yiting Lin, Jing Yu
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  • Efficacy of biological therapies and small molecules in induction and maintenance of remission in luminal Crohn’s disease: systematic review and network meta-analysis
    Brigida Barberio, David J Gracie, Christopher J Black, Alexander C Ford
    Gut.2023; 72(2): 264.     CrossRef
  • Seronegative spondyloarthropathy-associated inflammatory bowel disease
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    World Journal of Gastroenterology.2023; 29(3): 450.     CrossRef
  • Early Change in Fecal Calprotectin Predicts One‐Year Outcome in Children Newly Diagnosed With Ulcerative Colitis
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    Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition.2022; 74(1): 72.     CrossRef
  • Long-Term Safety of Adalimumab in 29,967 Adult Patients From Global Clinical Trials Across Multiple Indications: An Updated Analysis
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    Advances in Therapy.2020; 37(1): 364.     CrossRef
  • Comparative Evaluation of 4 Commercially Available ELISA Kits for Measuring Adalimumab and Anti-adalimumab Antibodies
    Melissa Joyce Sam, Susan Jane Connor, Watson Wa-Sang Ng, Catherine Mei-Ling Toong
    Therapeutic Drug Monitoring.2020; 42(6): 821.     CrossRef
  • Nonimmunity against hepatitis B virus infection in patients newly diagnosed with inflammatory bowel disease
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    Intestinal Research.2018; 16(3): 400.     CrossRef
  • Updated treatment strategies for intestinal Behçet’s disease
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    The Korean Journal of Internal Medicine.2018; 33(1): 1.     CrossRef
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    Jong Pil Im, Byong Duk Ye, You Sun Kim, Joo Sung Kim
    The Korean Journal of Internal Medicine.2018; 33(1): 28.     CrossRef
  • Long-Term Outcomes of Adalimumab Treatment in 254 Patients with Crohn’s Disease: A Hospital-Based Cohort Study from Korea
    Hyungil Seo, Byong Duk Ye, Eun Mi Song, Sun-Ho Lee, Kiju Chang, Ho-Su Lee, Sung Wook Hwang, Sang Hyoung Park, Dong-Hoon Yang, Kyung-Jo Kim, Jeong-Sik Byeon, Seung-Jae Myung, Suk-Kyun Yang
    Digestive Diseases and Sciences.2017; 62(10): 2882.     CrossRef
  • Rare occurrence of inflammatory bowel disease in a cohort of Han Chinese ankylosing spondylitis patients- a single institute study
    Chrong-Reen Wang, Chia-Tse Weng, Chung-Ta Lee, Kuo-Yuan Huang, Sheng-Min Hsu, Ming-Fei Liu
    Scientific Reports.2017;[Epub]     CrossRef
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