Abatacept for IBD?

Doesn’t work (Gastroenterology 2012; 143: 62-69).  While this study indicates that Abatacept was not effect for either Crohn’s disease (CD) or ulcerative colitis (UC), it was useful nevertheless.

In brief, the study examined four placebo-controlled trials of abatacept for induction and maintenance therapy in both CD and UC.  The induction studies included 451 CD patients and 490 UC patients.  The maintenance studies had 90 CD and 131 UC patients.

Results for induction:

  • CD: Clinical response: 17%, 10%, 15% for abatacept dosing of 30, 10, and 3 mg/kg.  Placebo 14%
  • UC: 21%, 19%, 20%  for abatacept dosing of 30, 10, and 3 mg/kg.  Placebo 29.5%

Results for maintenance:

  • CD: 24% abatacept vs 11% placebo
  • UC: 12.5% vs 14% placebo

The premise of this study was that T-cell activation requires co-stimulatory signaling via T cell CD28 and CD80 or CD86 on the antigen-presenting cell.  Abatacept (CTLA4-Ig) which is effective for psoriasis, rheumatoid arthritis, and juvenile idiopathic arthritis was thought to have potential; it blocks costimulation pathways involved in T-cell activation which was shown to be helpful in animal model of colitis.

So why did it not work?  The editorial in the same volume (pages 13-16) suggests the following possibilities:

  • Abatacept would be more likely to work when naive T cells are actively recruited into inflammation rather than memory T cells which are predominant in IBD
  • CD28-related pathways may not be important in IBD pathogenesis
  • Abatacept may have impeded Treg function in addition to preventing T-cell activation (explained in Fig 1D)
  • Blockade of CD28 pathways could have resulted in unfavorable changes in cytokine profiles from T-cell differentiation (Th1 vs Th2)

The implication of this study is that not all T-cell mediated inflammatory disease respond to the same treatment approaches.  The complexity of intestinal immune responses necessitates ongoing clinical studies to determine which promising therapies will be useful.

Upper endoscopy useful for identifying Crohn’s disease

In a large pediatric study, the value of upper endoscopy in detecting Crohn’s disease (CD) is evident (JPGN 2012: 54: 753-57).

While the majority of pediatric patients with suspected inflammatory bowel disease probably undergo both upper endoscopy and colonoscopy, the added value of upper endoscopy remains unclear.  In this retrospective study with 171 pediatric patients (70 with CD, 33 with UC, 68 Non-IBD), 11% of children with CD had the diagnosis established based “solely” on the finding of granulomatous inflammation in upper intestinal tract (along with clinical symptoms).

Other key findings:

  • Presence of histologic gastric inflammation in CD patients compared to control patients was significantly higher (p<0.0001) but not significantly higher compared to UC patients (p=0.19).
  • Duodenal inflammation was highly suggestive of CD compared with both UC and non-IBD patients.  This occurred in 19% of CD patients compared with 0% and 1% in the other groups respectively.
  • 21 children (30%) had granulomas identified in upper GI tract (19 in stomach).  In 8 (11%), the diagnosis was changed based on this finding.  Prior to histology, the tenative diagnosis: 2 UC, 4 IC, 2 non-IBD.
One curious finding was a the presence of “perianal abscess/fistula” with similar frequency in CD patients and UC patients based on their Table 2 Patient Characteristics.
Additional references:
  • -IBD 2009; 15: 1101-4.  Presence of UGI disease in IBD.
  • -JPGN 2007; 44: 653.  NASPGHAN report on discriminating/labelling UC vs. Crohn’s.
  • -JPGN 2002; 35: 636-40. Advocates panendoscopy for all new IBD.  Granulomas in 28% of EGDs & 71% of UC pts c some abnl on EGD; 82% Crohn’s c abnl EGD.
  • -JPGN 2005; 41: abstract 181 (page 549).  UGI identified granulomas in 15% that were not identified elsewhere.
  • -JPGN 2004; 39: 257-61. Diagnostic role of EGD for pediatric IBD.
  • Magnetic resonance enterography for Crohn’s disease