Abstract

PurposeTo determine predictors of treatment success after dose escalation of adalimumab, including measurement of anti-adalimumab antibodies as a predictor of success DesignRetrospective clinical cohort study SettingSingle-center academic institution Study PopulationPatients with noninfectious uveitis who were inadequately controlled or developed recurrent disease on biweekly adalimumab and required dose escalation or therapy modification Observation ProceduresPatients who had anti-adalimumab antibodies checked with resultant low to intermediate levels were compared to patients who had no testing performed prior to adalimumab dose escalation. Of note, patients with testing and resultant high levels of anti-adalimumab antibodies were not escalated. Predictors of escalation success and utility of antibody testing prior to escalation were analyzed using Kaplan Meier survival analysis and Cox proportional hazard models. Main Outcome MeasuresTreatment success defined as anterior chamber grade ≤0.5+ cell, topical corticosteroids ≤1 drop/day, oral prednisone ≤5 mg/day, resolution of macular edema, and resolution of angiographic signs of inflammation without any addition or escalation of therapy. Results24 patients had antibodies tested with low to intermediate levels (average: 32.3 ng/mL, range: 0 – 154), while 41 did not have antibody testing. A greater treatment success rate post escalation was observed among the “low antibody” group compared to the “no testing” group (HR: 2.63, standard error: 1.19, p=0.031, 95% CI 1.09 – 6.37). Among the entire cohort, patients with panuveitis (n = 14) had a lower treatment success rate compared to the reference of anterior uveitis (n = 26) (HR: 0.09, standard error: 0.11, p = 0.05, 95% CI 0.01 – 0.99). ConclusionsPatients with low anti-adalimumab antibodies had a greater treatment success compared to patients in whom antibodies were not checked. This suggests a utility to checking antibodies prior to dose escalation and that low levels of antibodies may confer a success advantage. Overall, patients with panuveitis had a lower rate of success after escalation while patients with anterior uveitis patients had a very high rate of success suggesting that certain disease characteristics may guide clinicians when determining who to escalate versus changing therapy.

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