Department of Gastroenterology, Alfred Hospital, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Monash University, Faculty of Medicine Nursing and Health Sciences, Clayton, Victoria, Australia.
BMJ Open. 2024 Jul 20;14(7):e081787. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-081787.
A substantial proportion of patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) on intravenous infliximab require dose intensification. Accessing additional intravenous infliximab is labour-intensive and expensive, depending on insurance and pharmaceutical reimbursement. Observational data suggest that subcutaneous infliximab may offer a convenient and safe alternative to maintain disease remission in patients requiring dose-intensified infliximab. A prospective, controlled trial is required to confirm that subcutaneous infliximab is as effective as dose-intensified intravenous infliximab, to identify predictors of disease flare and to establish the role of subcutaneous infliximab therapeutic drug monitoring.
The DISCUS-IBD trial is an investigator-initiated, prospective, multicentre, randomised, open-label non-inferiority study comparing the rate of disease flares in participants randomised to continue dose-intensified intravenous infliximab to those switched to subcutaneous infliximab after 48 weeks. Participants are adult patients with IBD in sustained corticosteroid-free remission on any regimen of dose-intensified infliximab up to a maximum of 10 mg/kg 4-weekly intravenously. Participants allocated to intravenous infliximab will continue infliximab at the same dose-intensified regimen they were receiving at study enrolment. Subcutaneous infliximab dosing will be stratified by prior intravenous infliximab dosing. Clinical (Harvey-Bradshaw Index, partial Mayo score), biochemical (C reactive protein, faecal calprotectin), pharmacokinetic (drug-level±antidrug antibodies) and qualitative data are collected 12-weekly until study conclusion at week 48. 13 sites across Australia will participate in recruitment to reach a calculated sample size of 120 participants.
Multisite ethics approval was obtained from the Health District Human Research Ethics Committee (HREC) at The Alfred Hospital under a National Mutual Acceptance (NMA) agreement (HREC/90559/Alfred-2022; Local Reference: Project 618/22, version 1.6, 2 March 2023). Findings will be reported at national and international gastroenterology meetings and published in peer-reviewed journals. DISCUS-IBD was prospectively registered with the Australian and New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (ANZCTR) prior to commencing recruitment.
ACTRN12622001458729.
相当一部分炎症性肠病(IBD)患者在接受静脉注射英夫利昔单抗治疗后需要进行剂量强化。根据保险和药物报销情况,获得额外的静脉注射英夫利昔单抗既繁琐又昂贵。观察性数据表明,皮下注射英夫利昔单抗可能是一种方便且安全的替代方案,可以维持需要剂量强化的英夫利昔单抗治疗的患者的疾病缓解。需要进行前瞻性、对照试验来证实皮下注射英夫利昔单抗与剂量强化的静脉注射英夫利昔单抗同样有效,以确定疾病发作的预测因素,并确定皮下注射英夫利昔单抗治疗药物监测的作用。
DISCUS-IBD 试验是一项由研究者发起的、前瞻性的、多中心、随机的、开放性非劣效性研究,比较了在第 48 周时继续接受剂量强化静脉注射英夫利昔单抗的患者与转换为皮下注射英夫利昔单抗的患者之间疾病发作的发生率。该试验纳入的参与者为正在接受任何方案的剂量强化英夫利昔单抗治疗、且无论何种方案均处于持续无皮质类固醇缓解的成年 IBD 患者,英夫利昔单抗的剂量最高可达 10mg/kg,每 4 周静脉注射一次。被分配至静脉注射英夫利昔单抗的患者将继续按照入组时接受的相同剂量强化方案接受英夫利昔单抗治疗。皮下注射英夫利昔单抗的剂量将根据先前的静脉注射英夫利昔单抗的剂量进行分层。在研究结束时(第 48 周),每隔 12 周收集临床(Harvey-Bradshaw 指数、部分 Mayo 评分)、生化(C 反应蛋白、粪便钙卫蛋白)、药代动力学(药物水平±抗体)和定性数据。澳大利亚的 13 个地点参与了招募工作,以达到 120 名参与者的预计样本量。
The Alfred Hospital 的卫生区人类研究伦理委员会(HREC)根据国家互认(NMA)协议从多个地点获得了伦理批准(HREC/90559/Alfred-2022;当地参考:项目 618/22,版本 1.6,2023 年 3 月 2 日)。研究结果将在全国和国际胃肠病学会议上报告,并发表在同行评议的期刊上。DISCUS-IBD 在开始招募之前已在澳大利亚和新西兰临床试验注册中心(ANZCTR)进行了前瞻性注册。
ACTRN12622001458729。