Abstract

SummaryBackgroundAnti‐TNF antibodies were the first biologic treatment option for patients with inflammatory bowel diseases.AimsTo assess length of treatment persistence of first anti‐TNF therapy and influencing factors used in the standard care of patients with inflammatory bowel diseases.MethodsSingle‐centre, retrospective study from a register including patients who received anti‐TNF therapy in the last 20 years at the study centre. Kaplan‐Meier analysis with log‐rank test was used to describe treatment persistence. With multivariable Cox regression analysis, risk factors for treatment failure were investigated.ResultsFive hundred thirty‐eight patients (CD, Crohn's disease: 367, UC, ulcerative colitis: 147, inflammatory bowel disease unclassified: 24) with a median follow‐up of 8.1 years were included. Median (95% confidence interval) treatment persistence in the total cohort was 2.3 years (28 [22, 38] months), and nearly half of patients withdrew from treatment within 2 years. Male patients were treated longer than females (male: 37 [25, 48] months, female: 23 [14, 33] months, P = 0.002). Treatment persistence was longer in CD compared to UC (CD: 39 [30, 50] months, UC: 13 [9, 19] months, P < 0.001), and patients with CD remained longer on adalimumab than on infliximab treatment (adalimumab: 67 [55, 95] months, infliximab: 19 [14, 31] months, P < 0.001). Treatment failure (52%) and side effects (25%) were the most common reasons for withdrawal from therapy; 14% withdrew due to remission. Female sex was identified as independent predictor for treatment failure in UC (hazard ratio [CI]: 1.73 [1.02‐2.92], P = 0.04).ConclusionLong‐term treatment persistence of first anti‐TNF therapy was limited in patients with inflammatory bowel diseases, primarily due to treatment failure and side effects.

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