Objective: The FDA approved adalimumab, an anti-tumor necrosis factor alpha agent, for the treatment of moderate to severe pediatric ulcerative colitis (UC) in February 2021. There are no real-world publications, however, on adalimumab as the first-line biologic in pediatric UC, a form of chronic inflammatory bowel disease (IBD).
Methods: A retrospective review was conducted to characterize the clinical courses of nine patients with moderate to severe pediatric UC who received adalimumab as their first biologic and had documented drug monitoring trough levels.
Results: Seven of the nine patients, or 78%, were switched from adalimumab to another therapy due to continued symptoms or steroid-dependence at an average of 5 months from initiation. Six of these seven patients, or 86%, had adalimumab drug trough levels in the consensus therapeutic range. Three patients were successfully switched to infliximab.
Conclusions: Both the Crohn's disease-based dosing and the new FDA-approved pediatric UC dosing of adalimumab were ineffective in inducing remission in the majority of patients in our case series. This study indicates that further real-world observations are needed to optimize and position adalimumab in the treatment paradigm of moderate to severe pediatric UC.
© 2022 by the Association of Clinical Scientists, Inc.