Integrating efficacy and safety of vedolizumab compared with other advanced therapies to assess net clinical benefit of ulcerative colitis treatments: a network meta-analysis
收藏DataCite Commons2022-11-01 更新2024-07-29 收录
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https://tandf.figshare.com/articles/dataset/Integrating_efficacy_and_safety_of_vedolizumab_compared_with_other_advanced_therapies_to_assess_net_clinical_benefit_of_ulcerative_colitis_treatments_a_network_meta-analysis/14054007/3
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Because only one head-to-head randomized trial of biologics for moderate-to-severe UC has been performed, indirect treatment comparisons remain important. This systematic review and network meta-analysis examined efficacy and safety of biologics and tofacitinib for moderate-to-severe UC, using vedolizumab as reference. Relevant studies (N = 19) of vedolizumab, adalimumab, infliximab, golimumab, ustekinumab, and tofacitinib were identified. Study design differences were addressed by assessing efficacy outcomes conditional on response at maintenance initiation. Primary analysis used fixed-effect models to estimate odds ratios for efficacy and safety endpoints. Compared with vedolizumab 300 mg, adalimumab 160/80 mg was associated with less clinical remission (odds ratio, 0.69 [95% credible interval, 0.54–0.88]), and infliximab 5 mg/kg was associated with more clinical remission (1.67 [1.16–2.42]) and response (1.63 [1.15–2.30]). Adalimumab 40 mg, golimumab 50 mg, and ustekinumab 90 mg Q12W had significantly lower clinical remission rates during maintenance (0.62 [0.45–0.86], 0.55 [0.32–0.95], and 0.59 [0.35–0.99]) versus vedolizumab 300 mg Q8W. Response results were similar. Tofacitinib 10 mg had the highest maintenance treatment efficacy estimates and highest infection risk. Network meta-analysis and novel integrated benefit-risk analysis suggest a potentially favorable efficacy-safety balance for vedolizumab vs adalimumab and other advanced UC therapies.
提供机构:
Taylor & Francis
创建时间:
2022-11-01



