4.5 Article

Once-daily mesalamine granules for maintaining remission of ulcerative colitis: pooled analysis of efficacy, safety, and prognostic factors

Journal

POSTGRADUATE MEDICINE
Volume 128, Issue 3, Pages 273-281

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/00325481.2016.1152876

Keywords

Inflammatory bowel disease; remission; ulcerative colitis; mesalamine

Funding

  1. Salix, a Division of Valeant Pharmaceuticals North America LLC, Bridgewater, NJ, USA [MPUC3003, MPUC3004]
  2. Salix
  3. AbbVie
  4. Aptalis
  5. Avaxia
  6. Coronado
  7. Cubist
  8. Dr. Falk
  9. Evoke
  10. Ferring
  11. Furiex
  12. GlaxoSmithKline
  13. Hutchinson
  14. Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
  15. Lexicon
  16. Pfizer Inc.
  17. Prometheus
  18. Red Hill BioPharma
  19. Revogenex
  20. Sanofi-Aventis U.S.
  21. Shire
  22. Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Limited
  23. Theravance
  24. Tranzyme
  25. UBC
  26. UCB
  27. Ventrus
  28. Warner Chilcott

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Objectives: A capsule formulation of mesalamine granules (MG) was developed for once-daily dosing and better compliance. The study aim was to evaluate MG efficacy and tolerability in maintaining ulcerative colitis (UC) remission. Methods: Pooled analysis of 2 identical phase 3, randomized, double-blind trials of once-daily MG 1.5 g or placebo for up to 6 months. The primary endpoint was percentage of patients remaining relapse-free at month 6 versus placebo. Relapse was defined as revised Sutherland Disease Activity Index (SDAI) rectal bleeding score >= 1 and mucosal appearance score >= 2, UC flare, or UC-related adverse event (AE). Results: Data were pooled for patients receiving MG (n = 373) and placebo (n = 189). Significantly more patients were relapse-free at 6 months with MG (79.4%) than placebo (62.4%; P < 0.001) and across subgroups based on select demographic and baseline characteristics (P < 0.05). Secondary outcome measures including rectal bleeding, physician rating of disease activity, stool frequency, total SDAI score, and relapse-free duration favored MG (P < 0.01). Common AEs with MG and placebo, respectively, were headache (10.9% and 7.6%), diarrhea (7.9% and 7.0%), and abdominal pain (6.3% and 6.5%). Conclusion: Once-daily MG was more efficacious than and as well tolerated as placebo in maintaining UC remission. ClinicalTrials.gov identifiers: NCT00744016 and NCT00767728.

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