Hi All - Some latest research done by University of North Carolina.
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2023-04-landmark-clinical-trial-pediatric-crohn.html
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2023-04-landmark-clinical-trial-pediatric-crohn.html
Yeah, they found that, but they also found that Remicade + MTX was not better than Remicade alone. Which is at least mildly surprising to me. I would have expected those two biologics to behave the same in that respect.I don't get it. What did they find? Humira + mtx better than Humira alone?
I thought MTX is always prescribed along with Remicade to lower the chance of the body developing antibody to the drug?
Remicade is almost always given as monotherapy nowadays to reduce risks. Combo therapy has become very rare.
What they instead do with some patients is dose escalation, so they decrease the time between infusions.
Some people break down these molecules faster than others, through protease. You can measure this. Remicade half-life is just over a week.
What also changed completely is how they give remicade to people. It used to be given once and was stopped. Now it is given every 8 weeks to patients. Another thing that changed is that they now start Remicade with a 2 week, 4 week, 8 week lead-in. It limits the chance of developing antibodies.
They also are more careful about latent TB with patients now. Some hospitals didn't used to do a mantoux test, so you had TB reactivation in some people with latent TB. Now they properly screen people before giving people remicade.
They also didn't used to let people drive their car when infliximab was first tried. Because it is a biologic, a new type of medicaiton, and they had no clue when an anaphylaxis reaction could take place. So people who were given infliximab in a hospital could not drive home. Now they know what the reaction looks like, they know when it happens, so people can just drive home.
Remicade has always been slightly more effective than other anti-TNF. Its mechanics are slightly different and it is also weight based, which makes it more appropriately dosed.
I found how other anti-TNF are dosed always weird, you're giving a young adult with half the weight the same dosis as an adult. It is because people want to take it at home so they make one size fits all injections, but this means improper dosing for patients. It means increased risk for people with low weight, and sometimes ineffective dosing for people with higher weight. Remicade is more correctly dosed.
Idk if it's an unknown story, but the reason Stelara exists is because patents on Remicade expired and biosimilars came onto the market.
Stelara has slightly worse remissions rates than Remicade. The main cytokine macrophages secrete is TNF and IL1, no one expected that blocking IL23 would improve things. It still brings down inflammation, but is slightly less effective and it takes longer since the the medication acts on the IL23 pathway.
The main thing that is hard to control is reactivation. You can protect your kid or yourself from acute infections by just limiting unnecessary contacts with sick people, cooking meat well to avoid foodborne infections, avoid contact with certain animals that cause zoonotic infections.
The problem is latent infections. TB, herpes zoster, there is nothing you can do about that except getting enough vitamin D, zinc, etc. Avoiding unnecessary psychological stress that we now know impacts the immune system. That's pretty much all you can do, the rest is hard to control.
What they instead do with some patients is dose escalation, so they decrease the time between infusions.
Some people break down these molecules faster than others, through protease. You can measure this. Remicade half-life is just over a week.