Abstract

Introduction: U-ACCOMPLISH is one of two phase 3 induction trials evaluating safety and efficacy of upadacitinib-45 mg once daily (UPA) in adults with ulcerative colitis (UC). Methods: U-ACCOMPLISH, a multicentre, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial (NCT03653026), enrolled patients (pts) with moderate-to-severe UC (defined as adapted Mayo score 5-9 with centrally read endoscopic score of 2-3) who had inadequate response, loss of response, or intolerance to aminosalicylates, immunosuppressants, corticosteroids and/or biologics. Pts were randomized 2:1 to UPA or placebo (PBO) for 8 weeks (wks). At wk 8, responders entered the maintenance phase and non-responders entered the extended treatment period to receive open-label UPA for additional 8 wks. Primary endpoint (clinical remission per adapted Mayo Score) and ranked secondary endpoints including symptomatic, endoscopic-histologic evaluations from 8-wk PBO-controlled period are reported here. Non-responder imputation incorporating multiple imputation for missing data due to COVID-19 are reported. Results: 522 pts were randomized (UPA, n = 345;PBO, n = 177);intent-to-treat population included 341 pts in UPA and 174 pts in PBO group. Baseline demographics and disease characteristics were similar between groups;50.7% and 51.1% were biologic inadequate responders in UPA and PBO groups, respectively (Table 1). A significantly higher proportion of pts receiving UPA (33.5%) versus PBO (4.1%) achieved primary endpoint (adjusted treatment difference: 29.0% [23.2, 34.7];P<0.001). A significantly higher proportion of pts receiving UPA versus PBO also achieved all ranked secondary endpoints (all P<0.001;Figure 1).Serious adverse events were reported by 3.2% and 4.5% of pts in UPA and PBO groups, respectively (Table 1). Similar rates of serious infection were observed in both groups (0.6%);2 events each of herpes zoster and opportunistic infection were reported in UPA group. No active tuberculosis, malignancy, adjudicated major adverse cardiovascular events, or deaths were reported. One pt with venous thromboembolism (deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism) and 1 pt with gastrointestinal perforation were reported in the placebo group. Conclusion: UPA 45 mg QD induction treatment led to statistically significant improvements in clinical, endoscopic, and combined endoscopic-histologic endpoints. Treatment was well tolerated, and safety profile and AE prevalence were comparable with previous studies of UPA with no new safety signals identified.

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