Reuters Health Information: Mycophenolate mofetil may be effective for autoimmune hepatitis
Mycophenolate mofetil may be effective for autoimmune hepatitis
Last Updated: 2016-04-01
By Reuters Staff
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) may
be effective as first-line treatment of autoimmune hepatitis
(AIH), researchers from Greece report.
Treatment with corticosteroids with or without azathioprine
is the standard of care for AIH, with 65% to 80% of patients
showing improvements, they note in a report online March 16 in
Alimentary Pharmacology and Therapeutics. But relapse is almost
universal when azathioprine immunosuppression is discontinued in
patients in long-term remission.
Dr. George N. Dalekos and colleagues from the University of
Thessaly, School of Medicine, Larissa, explored the role of MMF,
which induced remission in 88% of patients in their earlier
study, in a real-world observational study of treatment-naïve
patients receiving MMF as first-line treatment for AIH.
One hundred and nine AIH patients received prednisolone plus
MMF, and 22 patients who did not consent to the MMF protocol
received conventional immunosuppression. Patients were followed
for three to 168 months.
The initial complete response rates were 93.6% in the MMF
group and 72.7% in the conventional treatment group (p=0.01),
with 81.3% and 68.7%, respectively, achieving this result within
three months.
About a quarter of MMF patients (23.5%) and 37.5% of
conventional-treatment patients who achieved complete remission
relapsed during prednisolone tapering or withdrawal.
Forty MMF patients had MMF withdrawn after 24 to 132 months,
and 30 of these remained in remission at the time of this
report. The other 10 relapsed within five to 24 months of MMF
discontinuation.
Longer duration of MMF therapy was the only independent
predictor of maintenance of remission after stopping treatment.
MMF was well tolerated, with only two patients discontinuing
treatment and five requiring permanent dose reductions because
of adverse effects.
"Most importantly, the present large cohort study not only
confirmed our previous findings concerning the high efficacy and
safety of MMF use as first-line treatment for AIH23 but also
showed for the first time the highest rates of maintenance of
complete remission off treatment (75%) ever published, although
the remission criteria were strict," the researchers conclude in
their paper.
They add, "As relapse after drug withdrawal is almost
universal with conventional therapy (73-100% in 2 years off
treatment follow-up, with almost 50-90% of the relapses
occurring typically in the first 12 months after stopping
treatment), MMF seems a reasonable, safe and important
first-line treatment of AIH which should seriously and urgently
be considered in the future, although the risk of potential bias
and overestimation of intervention benefits due to the presently
relative small time of follow-up off treatment (median of 24
months, so far) cannot be excluded in this real-world study."
Dr. Dalekos did not respond to a request for comments. The
authors declared no conflicts of interest.
SOURCE: bit.ly/1RtF4NE
Aliment Pharmacol Ther 2016.
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