Adherence to Objective Therapeutic Monitoring and Outcomes in Patients with Inflammatory
Bowel Disease with Adalimumab Treatment. A Real-world Prospective Study
Background and Aims: Objective monitoring and effective early treatment using a treat-to-target
approach are key to improving therapeutic outcomes in IBD patients. This study aimed
to assess adherence to objective monitoring (clinical, biomarkers, and endoscopy)
and its impact on clinical outcomes.Methods: A prospective, multicenter study included
consecutive IBD patients starting on adalimumab therapy between January 2019 and December
2020. Disease activity, assessed by the Harvey-Bradshaw index (HBI), partial Mayo,
C-reactive protein (CRP), fecal calprotectin (FCAL), and endoscopy were evaluated
at adalimumab initiation and 3, 6, 9 and 12 months. Therapeutic drug monitoring, changes
in treatment, drug sustainability, and clinical outcomes were assessed.Results: 104
IBD patients were enrolled (78.8% CD, median age 34.3 years, disease duration 9 years).
During the 12 months follow-up, high adherence to clinical activity assessment was
observed in both CD (81.3%- 87.7%) and UC patients (76.5-90.9%). CRP measurement decreased
over time in both CD (37.3%-54.9%) and UC (29.4%-50.0%). The adherence to serial FCAL
monitoring was low in CD (22.7-31.3%) and UC patients (17.6-56.0%). UC patients had
higher adherence to early endoscopic assessment (<6 months) compared to CD patients
(40.9% vs. 21.5%). Adherence to early combined clinical and biomarkers resulted in
earlier dose optimization in CD and UC (log-rank<0.001), but drug sustainability was
not different. The patients with early combined adherence had a significantly higher
clinical remission rate at 1 year compared to non-adherence (70.2% vs. 29.8%, p=0.007)
but no significant difference in UC patients.Conclusions: The adherence to early objective
monitoring with combined clinical and biomarkers assessment in IBD patients starting
adalimumab therapy led to dose optimization and improved 1-year clinical remission
in CD but did not change drug sustainability and clinical remission in UC.