The goal of this retrospective study is to learn about dosing patterns in patients starting subcutaneous vedolizumab administration and patient outcomes after starting subcutaneous administration. Patients with IBD who are starting subcutaneous vedolizumab administration between September 1, 2023, and March 31, 2025, as part of normal patient care, will be retrospectively reviewed and analyzed.
Vedolizumab intravenous (IV) infusions have been a first-line treatment option for patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), including Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC) for over ten years. Recently, vedolizumab has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration for subcutaneous (SC) administration in the United States, offering patients a more convenient treatment option with medication administration at home. Evidence, largely from European countries where the SC formulation of vedolizumab has been available since 2020, shows a durable and potentially improved clinical response when switching to the SC formulation. A high SC treatment persistence has been found, mainly above 80%. Additionally, many patients accept the transition to SC vedolizumab as a safe and feasible treatment option and noting that the shorter treatment duration was specifically advantageous. Current evidence is limited by the minimal amount of data on patients transitioning from IV to SC vedolizumab. For treatment with vedolizumab IV to SC, large scale, real-life studies with long term follow-up are necessary. More research is needed to further evaluate predictors for a relapse when transitioning from IV to SC therapy that have been seen in previous studies, including older age, escalated IV dosing, fecal calprotectin \>250 microgram/gram at baseline, and CRP \> 2g/L at baseline. We must also evaluate patient clinical outcomes after switching from IV to SC vedolizumab or infliximab and potential predictors for a positive response. These results will drive clinical decisions and further understanding of treatment expectations. There is also a large gap in available information on standard and escalated dosing patterns before and after switching from IV to SC vedolizumab. Minimal research has evaluated whether or not patients on escalated IV dosing maintain escalated dosing at the time of switch or initiate standard SC dosing. There is a pressing need to understand dosing patterns in patients transitioning from escalated IV dosing to SC administration and patient outcomes after switching to SC administration based on dosing. The proposed study would meet current gaps in literature by evaluating 1) clinical outcomes in patients with CD and UC switching from IV to SC vedolizumab and 2) dosing patterns from standard or escalated IV dosing at baseline to standard or escalated SC dosing, including switching practices and outcomes.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
120
This study does not include any subject enrollment or randomization. This is a retrospective cohort review of patients referred to start subcutaneous vedolizumab from a VUMC IBD provider.
Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Nashville, Tennessee, United States
Clinical Remission
Defined as clinical remission assessed and written by provider in the office visit note
Time frame: baseline with IV dosing, and 3, 6, 9, 12 months after switching to SC
Endoscopic Remission
Endoscopic remission as seen by provider after colonoscopy assessment
Time frame: at baseline with IV dosing and within 12 months after switching to SC
Dosing patterns of IV dose/frequency and SC dose/frequency
standard dosing vs escalated dosing; includes any dose changes of the SC product within 12 months after switching from IV to SC
Time frame: At baseline and up to 12 months after switching
SIBDQ score
Short Inflammatory Bowel Disease Questionnaire: 10-item validated health-related quality of life tool that measures physical, social, and emotional status. It is designed to evaluate how the patient is feeling over the past two weeks. The 10 questions are given scores of 1 to 7 with an overall score of 10 to 70. The lower the score, the more severe the disease is impacting the patient's quality of life (QOL).
Time frame: Baseline and 12 months post switch to SC
Persistence to SC formulation
Measured by time to discontinuation; will include reason for discontinuation if SC stopped
Time frame: Up to 12 months after switching
Adverse events to vedolizumab SC
Adverse events to vedolizumab SC that required change back to IV
Time frame: Up to 12 months after switching
Adherence
Measured by PDC
Time frame: 12 months post switch to SC
Patient-reported missed doses
For patients filling with Vanderbilt Specialty Pharmacy only; will include reasons for patient-reported missed doses
Time frame: 12 months post switch to SC
Maintenance steroid use for IBD
Will determine if maintenance steroids were used for maintenance post switch to SC (yes/no)
Time frame: 12 months post switch to SC
Number of steroid prescriptions for flares
Based on prescription history in patient chart
Time frame: 12 months before and after switch
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