Abstract

This study aimed at exploring the link among individual concentrations, pharmacokinetic parameters, and the probability of relapse after de-escalation in a real-world prospective cohort of patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) who underwent infliximab treatment de-escalation. Ninety-one patients were included. A time-varying compartment model was used to estimate individual pharmacokinetic parameters and trough concentrations. A Cox model was implemented to explore the parameters influencing the probability of relapse after de-escalation. Volume, clearance, and trough before and after de-escalation were linked to the relapse risk at the univariate step. Independent predictors of relapse were tobacco use and/or ulcerative colitis (P=0.0093), a higher C-reactive protein (CRP; P=0.00064), and an infliximab trough <2.4μg/mL after de-escalation (P=0.0001). Patients with trough >5.7μg/mL are eligible to de-escalation, but infliximab pharmacokinetics is highly variable in time. Therefore, drug monitoring is mandatory after de-escalation to maintain trough >2.4μg/mL. Clearance monitoring seems an appealing approach for patient selection and relapse prediction.

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