4.6 Review

Therapeutic drug monitoring in inflammatory bowel disease: The dawn of reactive monitoring

Journal

WORLD JOURNAL OF GASTROENTEROLOGY
Volume 27, Issue 37, Pages 6231-6247

Publisher

BAISHIDENG PUBLISHING GROUP INC
DOI: 10.3748/wjg.v27.i37.6231

Keywords

Therapeutic drug monitoring; Inflammatory bowel disease; Biologic therapies; Loss of response; Reactive; Proactive

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Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a chronic condition that significantly impacts quality of life. Therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) plays an important role in managing IBD patients who do not respond or lose response to treatment. While there is a trend suggesting an association between clinical outcomes and drug concentrations, proactive TDM strategies have not demonstrated clear benefit in long-term outcomes.
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a chronic condition that significantly affects the quality of life of its patients. Biologic drugs have been the mainstay treatment in the management of IBD patients but despite their significant contribution, there remains a proportion of patients that do not respond or lose response to treatment. Therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) involves measuring levels of serum drug concentrations and anti-drug antibodies. TDM of biologic drugs initially emerged to understand treatment failure in other immune mediated inflammatory diseases. This was then introduced in IBD to rationalize primary non-response or secondary loss of response, given that low serum drug concentrations or the formation of anti-drug antibodies are variably associated with treatment failure. The aim of this narrative review is to provide an overview regarding the current use of TDM in clinical practice and to present the evidence available regarding its use in both proactive and reactive clinical settings in preventing and managing treatment failure. This review also presents the existing evidence regarding the association of various clinical outcomes with specific thresholds of drug concentrations, in everyday practice. A narrative review of published articles and conference abstracts regarding the use of TDM in IBD management, through an electronic search using PubMed and ScienceDirect. TDM has proven to be superior and more cost effective in guiding management of patients with treatment failure compared to empiric dose escalation or change in treatment. Despite a trend towards an association between clinical outcomes and drug concentrations, proactive TDM based strategies have not been shown to achieve clear benefit in long-term outcomes. In the clinical setting, TDM has proven to be useful in managing IBD patients, and its use in the reactive setting, as an additional tool to help manage patients with treatment failure, is being promoted as newer guidelines and consensus groups implement TDM as part of the management plan.

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