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Persistence on Anti-Tumour Necrosis Factor Therapy in Older Patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease Compared with Younger Patients: Data from the Sicilian Network for Inflammatory Bowel Diseases (SN-IBD)

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Abstract

Background and Objective

Older people with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) appear to have a lower response to anti-tumour necrosis factor (TNF) therapy, with more frequent complications than younger patients. The objective of this study was to assess persistence on therapy and the safety of anti-TNF therapy in older patients (aged ≥ 60 years).

Methods

We retrospectively reviewed the database of the Sicilian Network for Inflammatory Bowel Diseases (SN-IBD), extracting data regarding IBD patients aged ≥ 60 years and controls < 60 years of age at their first course of anti-TNF treatment. Data concerning persistence on therapy over the first year of treatment (primary objective) together with data on reasons for treatment withdrawal, concomitant diseases and treatments were collected.

Results

We identified 114 anti-TNF-naϊve patients aged ≥ 60 years (median age 64 years, range 60–80 years; 47 males) compared with 330 younger controls aged < 60 years (median age 39 years, range 18–59 years; 57 males). Older patients with Crohn’s disease (n = 73) showed a significantly lower persistence with every kind of anti-TNF therapy (whether analysed together [p < 0.001] or separately for intravenous and subcutaneous [SC] therapy) than younger controls, whereas older patients with ulcerative colitis (n = 41) showed a lower persistence when combining all kinds of anti-TNF treatment (p = 0.004) and for SC therapy. Secondary failures, infections, and neoplasias, but not primary failure, occurred more frequently in older IBD patients than in younger controls.

Conclusion

Despite a comparable number of primary failures, older IBD patients treated for the first time with anti-TNF agents showed lower treatment persistence due to higher rates of secondary failure, adverse events, infections, and tumours than younger patients in the first year of follow-up. The reasons for this difference still remain unclear.

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Correspondence to Walter Fries.

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Funding

The authors have no funding to declare for the present study.

Conflict of interest

With regard to the content of the paper, the authors SP, AV, AO, ACP, CF, MC, AV, SS, GI, AM, FM, RDM, NB, OF, SG, GM, CB, Ac, FSM, SR, MV, AA, MC and WF have no conflicts of interest to declare.

Ethical approval

The study was approved by the Ethics Committee of the coordinating centre (protocol number 191/18).

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Porcari, S., Viola, A., Orlando, A. et al. Persistence on Anti-Tumour Necrosis Factor Therapy in Older Patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease Compared with Younger Patients: Data from the Sicilian Network for Inflammatory Bowel Diseases (SN-IBD). Drugs Aging 37, 383–392 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1007/s40266-020-00744-3

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s40266-020-00744-3

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