Editorial
Copyright ©The Author(s) 2024.
World J Gastroenterol. Apr 21, 2024; 30(15): 2068-2080
Published online Apr 21, 2024. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v30.i15.2068
Table 2 Results of clinical trials with combination therapy in patients with active inflammatory bowel disease
Ref.DiseaseKind of CTEfficacy
Colombel et al[24], 2015Severe UCIFX + AZA vs IFX alone vs AZA aloneCT was more effective compared to monotherapy with AZA or IFX. High rate of mucosal healing with CT
Feagan et al[26], 2014CDIFX + MTX vs IFX alone vs MTX aloneNo significant differences. Safe combination
Louis et al[29], 2023CDIFX + AZA vs AZA alone vs IFX aloneRelapse rate: 12% in the DBT group compared to 35% (IFX group) and 9% in the AZA group. Most frequent side-effects: Infections
Roblin et al[30], 2020IBD 90 patientsTherapeutic strategies: Change of anti-TNF agent to another or adding immunosuppressantThe rate of clinical failure and occurrence of adverse pharmacokinetic curves were higher in monotherapy compared to CT. Use of CT after switching to the anti-TNF agent is recommended
Matsumoto et al[34], 2016CDMonotherapy vs combination group (ADA + AZA vs ADA alone)Remission rate at week 26 did not differ between the two groups. Thus, combination of ADA with AZA offers no benefit compared to ADA alone
Christensen et al[36], 20199 patients with CD and 11 with UCVDZ + calcineurin inhibitorsCT of VDZ with calcineurin inhibitors is a safe and effective combination to induce remission in IBD
Sands et al[37], 2019CDVDZ + CS vs VDZ alone vs CS aloneCT: Higher rates of clinical remission compared to the other groups. Similar adverse events