Induction and Maintenance Treatment with Upadacitinib Improves Health-Related Quality of Life in Patients with Moderately to Severely Active Ulcerative Colitis: Phase 3 Study Results

Julian Panés, Edward V. Loftus, Peter D.R. Higgins, James O. Lindsay, Wen Zhou, Xuan Yao, Dapo Ilo, Charles Phillips, Jacinda Tran, Yuri Sanchez Gonzalez, Séverine Vermeire

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background: We evaluated the health-related quality of life (HRQoL) benefits of upadacitinib (UPA) induction and maintenance treatment in a phase 3 study of patients with ulcerative colitis (UC) across a broad range of patient-centered outcomes. Methods: Patients received UPA 45 mg once daily or placebo as induction treatment for 8 weeks. Patients who achieved clinical response were rerandomized to receive once daily UPA 15 mg, 30 mg, or placebo as maintenance treatment for 52 weeks. The percentages of patients reporting a clinically meaningful within-person change from baseline in the Ulcerative Colitis Symptoms Questionnaire, Inflammatory Bowel Disease Questionnaire, Work Productivity and Impairment Questionnaire, 36-Item Short Form Survey, and European Quality of Life-5 Dimension 5 Levels were evaluated at weeks 2 and 8 of induction and at weeks 0 and 52 of maintenance. Results: Significant improvements from baseline in all HRQoL measures except the Work Productivity and Impairment Questionnaire-Absenteeism were achieved with UPA (P < .001) vs placebo as early as week 2 of induction. These improvements were sustained at week 52 with significantly more patients treated with either 15 mg or 30 mg UPA vs placebo achieving meaningful within-person change in the Ulcerative Colitis Symptoms Questionnaire; Inflammatory Bowel Disease Questionnaire; overall work impairment, presenteeism, and activity impairment; both 36-Item Short Form Survey Physical and Mental Component Summaries; and European Quality of Life-5 Dimension 5 Levels (P < .001). Conclusions: Induction treatment with UPA 45 mg significantly improved HRQoL measures. A significantly higher percentage of patients who responded to induction treatment with UPA maintained clinically meaningful improvements consistently across a wide range of HRQoL outcomes after 52 weeks of maintenance therapy with UPA (15 mg and 30 mg) compared with placebo. (ClinicalTrials.gov, Numbers: NCT02819635, NCT03653026).

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1421-1430
Number of pages10
JournalInflammatory bowel diseases
Volume29
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 1 2023

Keywords

  • clinical trials
  • quality of life
  • socioeconomical and psychological endpoints

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Immunology and Allergy
  • Gastroenterology

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