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Proactive therapeutic drug monitoring of Anti-TNFs with drug titration to a therapeutic window is associated with favorable long-term therapeutic outcomes in IBD and may be superior to reactive therapeutic drug monitoring. Moreover, many exposure-response relationship studies have shown that higher serum anti-TNF drug concentrations are associated with better clinical outcomes in IBD, suggesting that it is maybe time to go from a 'treat-to-target' to a 'treat-to trough' therapeutic approach. In this scenario, there are very limited data regarding therapeutic drug monitoring with golimumab in UC and even no data regarding a therapeutic window to target for important objectives outcomes like mucosal healing and histological remission.
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Tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α antagonists have changed the goals of ulcerative colitis (UC) treatment, with the focus now on preventing disease progression rather than just controlling symptoms. Anti-TNF agents have shown ability to achieve clinical remission and mucosal healing in UC. However, histological remission represents a target distinct from endoscopic healing in UC, and seems a better predictor of clinical outcomes. Moreover, histological remission and not mucosal healing has been associated with a reduced risk of colorectal cancer in UC. Infliximab was reported to induce histological remission in a significant proportion of UC patients. More recently, adalimumab was able to achieve histological remission in nearly one-third of anti-TNF naïve patients with moderately to severely active UC.
Reactive therapeutic drug monitoring of anti-TNF agents may help to identify mechanisms for loss of response and to guide selection of optimal intervention in individual patients and has been shown to be cost-effective compared with empiric dose escalation. Proactive therapeutic drug monitoring showed that anti-TNF trough levels are correlated with clinical response, clinical remission and mucosal healing in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Conversely, inadequate serum drug concentrations and antidrug antibodies are associated with poor clinical outcomes. Recently, a study demonstrated that infliximab trough concentrations during maintenance therapy are associated with endoscopic and histologic healing in patients with UC.
Golimumab, a subcutaneously administered fully human antibody to TNF, induces clinical response and remission in patients with moderately to severely active UC. In patients who responded to induction therapy, golimumab doses administered every 4 weeks as a maintenance regimen was effective in maintaining clinical response through 1 year. Available data on golimumab drug monitoring and exposure-response relationship in UC patients are from the PURSUIT trials. A positive association between golimumab levels and efficacy outcomes, including mucosal healing, was confirmed during both induction and maintenance portions of the PURSUIT studies.
Real life data regarding golimumab concentrations and clinical outcomes are lacking, with only a small observational study published. Besides, there are no data regarding the ability of golimumab to achieve histological remission in UC patients.
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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