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I-CARE,一项评估生物制剂在炎症性肠病中的安全性和有效性的欧洲前瞻性队列研究。

I-CARE, a European Prospective Cohort Study Assessing Safety and Effectiveness of Biologics in Inflammatory Bowel Disease.

机构信息

Department of Gastroenterology, Nancy University Hospital, University of Lorraine, Nancy, France.

Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire UCL Namur, Université Catholique de Louvain, Yvoir, Belgium.

出版信息

Clin Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2023 Mar;21(3):771-788.e10. doi: 10.1016/j.cgh.2022.09.018. Epub 2022 Sep 22.

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND AIMS

There is a need to evaluate the benefit-risk ratio of current therapies in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients to provide the best quality of care. The primary objective of I-CARE (IBD Cancer and serious infections in Europe) was to assess prospectively safety concerns in IBD, with specific focus on the risk of cancer/lymphoma and serious infections in patients treated with anti-tumor necrosis factor and other biologic monotherapy as well as in combination with immunomodulators.

METHODS

I-CARE was designed as a European prospective longitudinal observational multicenter cohort study to include patients with a diagnosis of Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis, or IBD unclassified established at least 3 months prior to enrollment.

RESULTS

A total of 10,206 patients were enrolled between March 2016 and April 2019, including 6169 (60.4%) patients with Crohn's disease, 3853 (37.8%) with ulcerative colitis, and 184 (1.8%) with a diagnosis of IBD unclassified. Thirty-two percent of patients were receiving azathioprine/thiopurines, 4.6% 6-mercaptopurine, and 3.2% methotrexate at study entry. At inclusion, 47.3% of patients were treated with an anti-tumor necrosis factor agent, 8.8% with vedolizumab, and 3.4% with ustekinumab. Roughly one-quarter of patients (26.8%) underwent prior IBD-related surgery. Sixty-six percent of patients had been previously treated with systemic steroids. Three percent of patients had a medical history of cancer prior to inclusion and 1.1% had a history of colonic, esophageal, or uterine cervix high-grade dysplasia.

CONCLUSIONS

I-CARE is an ongoing investigator-initiated observational European prospective cohort study that will provide unique information on the long-term benefits and risks of biological therapies in IBD patients. (EudraCT, Number: 2014-004728-23; ClinicalTrials.gov, Number: NCT02377258).

摘要

背景和目的

需要评估当前炎症性肠病(IBD)患者治疗方法的获益-风险比,以提供最佳的治疗质量。I-CARE(欧洲炎症性肠病的癌症和严重感染)的主要目的是前瞻性地评估 IBD 的安全性问题,特别关注接受抗肿瘤坏死因子和其他生物单药治疗以及与免疫调节剂联合治疗的患者的癌症/淋巴瘤和严重感染风险。

方法

I-CARE 是一项欧洲前瞻性纵向观察性多中心队列研究,纳入了至少在入组前 3 个月确诊为克罗恩病、溃疡性结肠炎或未分类的 IBD 的患者。

结果

2016 年 3 月至 2019 年 4 月期间,共纳入 10206 例患者,其中 6169 例(60.4%)为克罗恩病患者,3853 例(37.8%)为溃疡性结肠炎患者,184 例(1.8%)为未分类的 IBD 患者。32%的患者在研究入组时接受了硫唑嘌呤/巯嘌呤治疗,4.6%接受了 6-巯基嘌呤治疗,3.2%接受了甲氨蝶呤治疗。入组时,47.3%的患者接受了抗肿瘤坏死因子药物治疗,8.8%接受了 vedolizumab 治疗,3.4%接受了 ustekinumab 治疗。大约四分之一的患者(26.8%)曾接受过 IBD 相关手术。66%的患者曾接受过全身皮质类固醇治疗。3%的患者在入组前有癌症病史,1.1%的患者有结肠、食管或子宫颈高级别异型增生病史。

结论

I-CARE 是一项正在进行的由研究者发起的欧洲前瞻性队列研究,将提供关于 IBD 患者生物治疗的长期获益和风险的独特信息。(EudraCT,编号:2014-004728-23;ClinicalTrials.gov,编号:NCT02377258)

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