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Audio-Digest FoundationGastroenterology


Volume 22, Issue 09
September 1, 2008

The following is an abstracted summary, not a verbatim transcript, of the lectures/discussions on this audio program. If, after reviewing the summary, you would like to hear the contents and earn CME/CE credit, simply use your browser's back button to return to the order page and add this program to your cart. You will receive by mail the one-hour audiocassette or audio CD, a hard copy of the written summary (including a 10-question test), and a CME/CE response form.

Gastroenterology Program InfoAccreditation InfoCultural & Linguistic Competency Resources





IBD RISKS




Educational Objectives

The goal of this program is to improve the management of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). After hearing and assimilating this program, the clinician will be better able to:
1. Discuss the challenges in evaluating drug safety.
2. Review the safety of available biologic agents for mortality, infection, autoimmunity, neurologic conditions, and malignancy.
3. Describe the effect of IBD on body image and sexuality, menstrual cycle, osteoporosis, and pregnancy and fertility.
4. Review the Food and Drug Administration categories of drugs in pregnancy.
5. Prescribe drugs that are safe to use in pregnancy.

Faculty Disclosure

In adherence to ACCME Standards for Commercial Support, Audio-Digest requires all faculty and members of the planning committee to disclose relevant financial relationships within the past 12 months that might create any personal conflicts of interest. Any identified conflicts were resolved to ensure that this educational activity promotes quality in health care and not a proprietary business or commercial interest. For this program, the following has been disclosed: Dr. Devlin is a consultant for and on the Speakers’ Bureau of Schering-Plough and Abbott Laboratories and on the Advisory Board of UCB. Dr. Mahadevan is a consultant for Centocor, Abbott Laboratories, UCB, and Procter & Gamble.

Acknowledgements


Dr. Devlin was recorded at IBD Hot Topics 2008, held March 29, 2008, in Los Angeles, CA, and sponsored by the Cedars-Sinai Medical Center and the Crohn’s and Colitis Foundation of America, Greater Los Angeles and Orange County Chapter. Dr. Mahadevan was recorded at the 8th Annual Update in Gastroenterology, held October 26-28, 2007, in La Quinta, CA, and sponsored by the Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Division of Gastroenterology. The Audio-Digest Foundation thanks Drs. Devlin and Mahadevan and the sponsors for their cooperation in the production of this program.


PUTTING THERAPEUTIC RISKS INTO PERSPECTIVE —Shane Devlin, MD, Clinical Assistant Professor, Inflammatory Bowel Disease Clinic, Division of Gastroenterology, University of Calgary Faculty of Medicine, Calgary, AB
Evaluation of drug safety: challenges in pharmacoepidemiology—underlying condition systemic, with multiorgan involvement and morbidity; use of concomitant and preexistent medications; rare events; all applicable to inflammatory bowel disease (IBD); safety of available biologic agents—determined in clinical trials, postmarketing surveillance registries, case reports, and personal patients; clinical trials involved >6000 patients with Crohn’s disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC) with study periods of 1 yr or 18 mo; from postmarketing surveillance, infliximab patient exposures close to 1 million (3 million patient-years), with majority in rheumatoid arthritis and significant percentage in CD
Mortality associated with infliximab: mortality ultimate complication; meta-analysis shows slight increase in mortality associated with CD, but unknown whether related to biologic agents; in Mayo Clinic paper, 1% mortality associated with use of infliximab; death associated with inappropriate use of drug in elderly, patient with multisystem disease, or unrecog nized infection; from postmarketing surveillance and Crohn’s Therapy, Resource, Evaluation, and Assessment Tool (TREAT) Registry, infliximab not independently associated with mortality (not true for corticosteroids)
Infection: most common adverse event; across clinical trials, approximately one-third of participants develop clinical infection; opportunistic infections (OIs) occur; minority of infections occurred in patients with CD; looking at 3000 patients in registry treated with infliximab (unadjusted), increased risk found; when adjusted for concomitant use of steroids, immunosuppressants, and severity of disease, infliximab not independently associated; corticosteroids and severe disease main predictors of complications; complications avoided, to some extent, by vigilance and common sense and minimizing exposure to corticosteroids; suppressing immune response only way to treat IBD, so any effective therapy immunosuppressive and associated with increased risk for OIs; combination of drugs increases risk; know which OIs endemic in local area
Immunologic phenomena: infliximab and adalimumab induce apoptosis; over time, antinuclear antibody (ANA) positivity increases; at 2 yr, >50% of patients develop positive ANA (tends to occur early with infliximab); ANA positivity associated more with women and with skin manifestations
Neurologic complications: tumor necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitors associated with exacerbation of underlying multiple sclerosis (MS) or de novo demyelination; progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML)—OI possibly associated with natalizumab; demyelinating brain disorder associated with John Cunningham (JC) virus, which most individuals previously exposed to and have antibodies against; risk 1 in 1000
Malignancies: theoretically, any immunosuppressive agent associated with malignancy; with anti-TNF antibody, majority of lymphomas described non-Hodgkin’s; from postmarketing reports, rate 0.03/100 patient-years; from cancer database in United States, rate 0.07/100 patient-years for those 65 yr; across all clinical trials for infliximab, including patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), increase above general population estimates seen; RA associated with independent risk for lymphoma; same shown with adalimumab; meta-analysis—9 controlled trials in RA; 29 malignancies in anti-TNF treated patients and 3 malignancies in control group; dose response seen; in anti-TNF group, largest proportion lymphomas; rate of malignancy in control group 8 times less than expected in general population; tendency for underreporting in placebo group; risk and benefit of infliximab in CD—mathematical model simulating clinical trial comparing infliximab to standard therapy; patient model 35 yr of age with moderate to severe CD; 5 lymphomas reported in 1711 patients (converted to rate of 0.2%/yr); assumed that CD itself not associated with increased baseline risk for lymphoma and 3-fold increased risk for lymphoma with thiopurines; by treating 100,000 patients with infliximab, cause 201 more lymphomas and 250 more deaths; benefits include 12,000 more remissions, 4200 fewer surgeries, and 33 fewer deaths from CD; quality-adjusted life-years (QALY) for infliximab 0.77 and for standard therapy 0.75; 1 in 500 chance/yr of developing lymphoma on infliximab; summary of risk—conflicting signals; serious infections uncommon but risk worthy of vigilance; mortality not associated with infliximab; risk for PML with natalizumab requires further study; association of anti-TNF therapy with lymphoma not definite, but likely true phenomenon, although magnitude of risk uncertain; CD associated with diminished quality of life; direct costs related to therapy and surgery associated with indirect costs on personal and societal level; patients willing to accept 1% annual risk for lymphoma to go from severe CD to remission, and 0.4% annual risk to go from moderate to mild disease
MANAGEMENT OF IBD IN WOMEN Uma Mahadevan, MD, Associate Professor of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, School of Medicine, Center for Colitis and Crohn’s Disease, San Francisco, CA
Patient concerns in IBD: include energy level, medication side effects, surgery, ostomy, and being burden; issues particular to women include feelings about body, attractiveness, feeling alone, having children, intimacy, and sexual performance; depression not uncommon; problem of noncompliance with medications in adolescents and young patients due to denial and concerns about these issues
Menstrual cycle: symptoms worsen immediately before menses; most frequently reported symptoms include pelvic pain, low back pain, diarrhea, irritability, and headache; incidence of any menstrual symptoms significantly higher in IBD than in healthy controls; in some patients, symptoms severe and debilitating, and use of oral contraceptives (OCs) helpful; no data to support hypothesis that OCs worsen disease, although some soft data suggest increased incidence of IBD in patients using OCs; OCs have no influence on course of disease, but patients must not smoke (increased risk for thromboembolism)
Osteopenia and osteoporosis: IBD-related risk factors include medications, persistence of disease activity, vitamin-D deficiency, and calcium malabsorption; overall prevalence of osteoporosis in patients with IBD 15%; similar risk profiles for men and women; corticosteroid use most strongly associated with osteoporosis; overall incidence of fractures in population-based study 1 in 100 patient-years, but rate affected by age (more common in individuals >60 yr of age); overall relative risk for fractures 40% greater than that in general population
Screening: National Osteoporosis Foundation—advocates testing all women 65 yr of age, and younger postmenopausal women with previous fractures or >1 risk factor; American College of Gastroenterology (ACG) 2002 guidelines—dual energy x-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) recommended for patients with IBD who use steroids for >3 mo or recurrently; consider DEXA in IBD patients >60 yr of age because of increased risk for fracture and in patients who have had no or low-trauma fractures
Treatment: lifestyle modification (exercise; smoking cessation); minimizing corticosteroid use; nutritional supplementation; bisphosphonates (half-life 10 yr; cross placenta); consider hormone replacement therapy (HRT) in postmenopausal women; study by Kane—incidence of abnormal Papanicolaou (Pap) test 14% among control group, 33% in women with IBD not exposed to immunosuppressants, and 63% in those exposed; increased incidence of high-grade lesions in IBD group vs controls; incidence of >1 abnormal Pap test almost double in those exposed to azathioprine/6- mercaptopurine (AZA/6-MP), compared to those not exposed (similar results with infliximab); concluded that women with IBD carry higher risk for clinically important cervical lesions, particularly if on immunosuppressants; correspond with American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) guidelines for annual Pap test screening (rather than every 3 yr); if patient <25 yr of age, consider human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine
Pregnancy and fertility: Oxford study—similar rate of fertility in participants with UC, compared to controls; study by Olsen—80% reduction in ability to conceive (without help) after ileal pouch-anal anastomosis (IPAA); most likely due to surgery in pelvis, with adhesions and damage to reproductive organs; Hudson study—in CD, those who had surgery had higher rates of infertility than general population
Pregnancy outcomes: studies show that patients with IBD, UC, and CD have higher rates of preterm birth; patients with CD have higher rates of low birth weight (LBW) and small for gestational age (SGA) infants; no data that patients with CD have higher rates of congenital malformations (data from UC); meta-analysis—confirmed that patients with IBD had higher rates of prematurity, LBW, and cesarean delivery; also higher rate of congenital abnormalities (in UC patients); Dominitz study—rate of congenital malformations 7.9% in patients with UC, 3.4% in CD, and 1.7% in controls; did not control for medication use or disease activity; Norgard—found 0.3% rate of anomalies among patients with UC; when controlled for parity, age, and medication use, odds ratio 1.3 (not significant); when looked at individual anomalies, significant increased risk found, compared to general population; reason for increased risk in UC and not in CD unknown; Northern California Kaiser study—found increased risk for adverse conception outcomes (spontaneous abortion or abortion undefined) among patients with IBD; higher rate of adverse pregnancy outcomes (defined as SGA infants, preterm births, and stillbirths), compared to general population; also higher rate of pregnancy complications (eg, preeclampsia, abruptio placentae) and maternal mortality; newborn abnormalities (ie, neonatal seizures, neonatal intensive care unit [NICU] stay) and neonatal mortality not statistically significant but had highest odds ratio; in this study, medication use and disease severity not predictors of poor outcome; no increased rate of birth defects seen; for best outcome, maintain patient in remission throughout pregnancy

Medical Therapy in Pregnancy
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) categories: category A, controlled studies show no risk in humans; category B, no evidence of risk in humans; category C, animal studies show adverse effect, but benefits possibly acceptable; category D, positive evidence of risk; category X, contraindicated in pregnancy
Fish oil: supplement (not rated); essential fatty acids and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) have potential antithrombotic effect and prolong gestation; no evidence of preventing preeclampsia; mild benefit in CD; contains no mercury
Aminosalicylates: category B, except for olsalazine (Dipentum; category C); no increased risk with use during pregnancy and breast-feeding; controlled trial showed no increase in teratogenicity; initially, case reports of adverse events seen with sulfasalazine (not seen in larger case series); reduces folic acid (important for neural tube defects); during pregnancy, patient should have 2 mg of folic acid daily if continuing to use sulfasalazine; placental and breast transfer occurs; infant may develop watery diarrhea if breast-feeding
Corticosteroids: category C, including budesonide; case-control studies show that use in first trimester associated with very small risk for oral clefts; overall, risk for malformation low; in transplant setting, adrenal suppression in newborn and premature rupture of membranes reported; compatible with breast-feeding; no adverse events reported for patients on budesonide during pregnancy
Antibiotics: metronidazole category B; ciprofloxacin category C; low risk for teratogenicity; shown that use of metronidazole in first trimester associated with cleft lip and palate; prospective study showed ciprofloxacin associated with low risk for defects (however, use not advised due to affinity for bones and possible arthropathy in offspring); breast-feeding not advised with metronidazole, but probably compatible with ciprofloxacin; caveat—studies with antibiotics from obstetrics/ gynecology literature, so involve short courses of antibiotics, not weeks to months of use as in IBD; rifaximin—pregnancy category C; insufficient data in humans; overall, benefit in IBD minimal in long term (limit use in pregnancy; avoid in first trimester)
6MP/AZA: category D; teratogenic in animals given supratherapeutic doses intravenously; low oral bioavailability in humans (47% for AZA; 16% for 6MP); fetal liver in early pregnancy lacks ability to convert AZA to active metabolites (may account for protection during organogenesis); in transplantation studies, frequency of anomalies 0% to 12%, with no recurrent pattern; no increase in anomalies in rheumatic disease and lupus studies; Norgard study—cohort of 900 children born to women with CD; found 6.5% rate of preterm births in control group (25% in AZA group [statistically significant]; 12% in steroid group); for congenital anomalies, 5.7% in control group and 15.4% in AZA group (not statistically significant); Goldstein study—no difference in rate of major malformations in pregnant women on AZA, compared to those on nonteratogenic treatments; more prematurity and LBW in AZA group (expected in IBD); speaker continues AZA if only drug pregnant woman taking; if woman on infliximab and on AZA for immunogenicity, speaker considers stopping AZA; breast-feeding—no breast-feeding on AZA (American Academy of Pediatrics recommendation); 3 small studies show that AZA crosses placenta and 6-thioguanine nucleotide (TGN) found in infant at slightly lower levels than in mother; very low levels detected in breast milk, and metabolite levels not detectable in infant; elevated levels expected for 1 to 2 mo after birth due to placental transfer
Cyclosporine and tacrolimus: both category C; meta-analysis showed odds ratio of malformations 3.83 for cyclosporine; benefit of tacrolimus over cyclosporine due to lower hypertension and hyperlipidemia in mother, but higher incidence of diabetes in newborn; 5.6% rate of malformations, with no specific pattern; prematurity common; breast-feeding not recommended
Infliximab: category B; Katz study showed rates of live births, miscarriages, and therapeutic termination similar with infliximab as in general population; study of 10 patients with CD intentionally exposed to infliximab during pregnancy showed no birth defects but some preterm births and LBW infants (expected); infliximab and adalimumab IgG1 antibodies (do not cross placenta in first trimester); IgG1 antibodies transferred in third trimester, accounting for high levels detected in infant at birth (takes 2-7 mo for levels to disappear in infant); unable to monitor adalimumab (category B) levels in infants
Use with caution: diphenoxylate (category C) teratogenic in animals; loperamide associated with increased cardiovascular defects; bisphosphonates category C; alendronate (Fosamax) half-life 10 yr; study of 24 pregnancies showed no increased teratogenic risk; methotrexate (category X) known abortifacient, and causes teratogenic defects; thalidomide category X
Special circumstances: perianal CD—study found that in patients with no perianal disease at delivery, 1 in 39 developed perianal disease after pregnancy, but 4 in 4 with active perianal disease worsened after vaginal delivery; speaker recommends cesarean delivery for patient with active perianal disease (obstetrician’s discretion if perianal disease inactive or absent); fulminant UC—indications for surgery in pregnant patient same as for nonpregnant; case series in 1970s and 1980s showed high fetal mortality (40%-50%); series from Haq (2005) and Mayo Clinic showed 0% infant and maternal mortality; recommendation to perform colonic decompression and ileal diversion in first trimester; later in pregnancy, synchronous delivery and colectomy possibly best option; if possible, attempt medical therapy first and work closely with experienced colorectal surgeon; IPAA—reversible deterioration of pouch function during pregnancy; cesarean delivery recommended to preserve anal sphincter

Suggested Reading

Bebb JR et al: Immunosuppression, IBD, and risk of lymphoma. Gut 51:296, 2002; Cendan JC et al: Associated neoplastic disease in inflammatory bowel disease. Surg Clin North Am 87:659, 2007; Coburn LA et al: The successful use of adalimumab to treat active Crohn's disease of an ileoanal pouch during pregnancy. Dig Dis Sci 51:2045, 2006; Deshpande AR et al: Combination therapy with infliximab and immunomodulators: is the glass half empty? Gastroenterology 134:2161, 2008; Dorsey ER et al: Quantifying the risks and benefits of natalizumab in relapsing multiple sclerosis. Neurology 68:1524, 2007; Farrell RJ et al: Increased incidence of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in inflammatory bowel disease patients on immunosuppressive therapy but overall risk is low. Gut 47:514, 2000; Ferguson CB et al: Inflammatory bowel disease in pregnancy. BMJ 337:a427, 2008; Hanauer SB: Risks and benefits of combining immunosuppressives and biological agents in inflammatory bowel disease: is the synergy worth the risk? Gut 56:1181, 2007; Johnson FR et al: Crohn's disease patients' risk-benefit preferences: serious adverse event risks versus treatment efficacy. Gastroenterology 133:769, 2007; Rudolph SJ et al: Long-term durability of Crohn's disease treatment with infliximab. Dig Dis Sci 53:1033, 2008; Rutgeerts P et al: Optimizing anti-TNF treatment in inflammatory bowel disease. Gastroenterology 126:1593, 2004; Tilg H et al: Gut, inflammation and osteoporosis: basic and clinical concepts. Gut 57:684, 2008; van Staa TP et al: Inflammatory bowel disease and the risk of fracture. Gastroenterology 125:1591, 2003; Viget N et al: Opportunistic infections in patients with inflammatory bowel disease: prevention and diagnosis. Gut 57:549, 2008.

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