EH Boute et al. Inflamm Bowel Dis 2026; 32: 1086–1096. Open Access! Persistence and safety of subcutaneous infliximab up to 1 year after switching from intravenous infliximab in pediatric inflammatory bowel disease: a multicenter real-world cohort study
Methods: This was a retrospective multicenter study we identified pediatric IBD patients (n=66 including 41 with Crohn’s disease) who switched to SC-IFX. Median age 16.5 years. Pre-switch, the median IV-IFX maintenance dose was 10 mg/kg every 6 weeks. There were only 6 patients with a weight <40 kg.
Key findings:
- The initial SC-IFX regimen was 120 mg every other week in 62/66 patients (94%). 4 patients (6%) were initiated on 120 mg every week
- SC-IFX persistence was 78% at 12 months post-switch, with 89% of patients persisting on IFX, either intravenous (IV) or subcutaneous (SC), at the end of follow-up
- 17% (n=11) of patients experienced relapses. 6 patients underwent dose intensification (3 regained response), 3 patients switched to a different advanced therapy, and 3 patients received concomitant therapy
- 11 patients (17%) discontinued SC-IFX treatment after a median of 7.0 months
- 6 patients underwent SC-IFX dose intensification, with 3 successfully regaining clinical response
- Regarding anti-drug antibodies (ADA), 3 out of 4 patients who were ADA positive on IV-IFX resolved post-switch
- Three patients (3/66, 5%) experienced serious AEs requiring hospitalization, namely IgA-mediated nephropathy, pyelonephritis requiring IV antibiotics, and perianal fistula requiring seton drainage

Discussion:
- “Compared to IV-IFX, SC-IFX provides higher and more stable serum concentrations, avoiding peak-trough variability, potentially lowering immunogenicity and offering greater flexibility in TDM.”
- “Careful monitoring by the IBD team remains essential to ensure treatment adherence during and after the switch. In our cohort, most discontinuations (64%) were related to difficulties with the SC route, highlighting the importance of identifying the most suitable candidates.”
My take: More pediatric studies are needed. This study suggests that the effectiveness of SC-IFX in children will be similar to the effectiveness in adults. As more patients receive SC therapy, it will be particularly important to work on adherence with scheduled dosing, lab monitoring, and careful followup visits; all of these can be more difficult with SC compared with IV infusions.
Related blog posts:
- LIBERTY Trials for Subcutaneous Infliximab
- Infliximab Thresholds with Subcutaneous vs Intravenous Administration for Crohn’s Disease
- SC Infliximab versus Vedolizumab for Crohn’s Disease and for Ulcerative Colitis
- Vedolizumab and Infliximab: Expected Dosing When Switching From IV to SC Routes
- REMSWITCH: Infliximab IV to SC Study
- IBD Briefs: Upadcitinib in Children with Severe Colitis and Timing of Infliximab Switch to SC Route in Adults
- FDA-Approved Subcutaneous Infliximab (Zymfentra) Now Available (2024)











