Deucravacitinib is an oral, selective TYK2 inhibitor. The randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 2 LATTICE-UC trial (NCT03934216) was conducted to assess the safety and efficacy of this agent in patients with active UC. In total, 131 participants with moderately to severely active UC who failed at least 1 prior therapy were randomised 2:1 to 6 mg deucravacitinib twice daily (n=88), or placebo (n=43). The primary endpoint was clinical remissiona. Prof. Silvio Danese (Vita-Salute San Raffaele University, Italy) presented the results [1].
At week 12, the primary endpoint was not met. Clinical remission was achieved by 14.8% of the participants in the deucravacitinib arm and by 16.3% of the participants in the placebo arm (P=0.59). In participants who had failed on 1 or more prior biologic therapies, proportion of participants achieving clinical remission was 16.1%.
Deucravacitinib was well tolerated in the LATTICE-UC trial and the safety profile was consistent to deucravacitinib’s safety profiles in psoriasis trials. Adverse events (AEs) were reported in 70.1% and 47.6% of the participants in the experimental arm and placebo arm, respectively. Serious AEs were observed in 9.2% of the participants in the deucravacitinib arm and 4.8% of the participants in the placebo arm. Rash (11.5%), acne (9.2%), and UC (6.9%) were the most common AEs in participants treated with deucravacitinib.
Prof. Danese mentioned that pharmacological data showed that TYK2 engagement was observed without a subsequent effect on downstream inflammatory markers. According to Prof. Danese, this result suggests that the deucravacitinib dosing may have been too low to translate into clinical benefits for the participants. Therefore, another phase 2 trial (NCT04613518) is currently ongoing to investigate a higher dose of deucravacitinib in patients with UC.
a. Clinical remission is defined as modified Mayo score with subscores of stool frequency ≤1 with ≥1-point decrease from baseline, rectal bleeding of 0, and endoscopic subscore ≤1 excluding friability
- Danese S, et al. Efficacy and safety of deucravacitinib, an oral, selective tyrosine kinase 2 inhibitor, in patients with moderately-to-severely active Ulcerative Colitis: 12-week results from the Phase 2 LATTICE-UC study. DOP42, ECCO 2022, 16–19 February.
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Table of Contents: ECCO 2022
Featured articles
Upadacitinib maintenance therapy delivers sustained improvements in active ulcerative colitis
Novel Treatment Modalities
Guselkumab shows encouraging safety and efficacy in ulcerative colitis
Guselkumab maintenance therapy achieved high efficacy rates in Crohn’s disease
Mirikizumab efficacious for active ulcerative colitis
Risankizumab more efficacious in colonic than in ileal Crohn’s disease
Guselkumab plus golimumab promising combination for ulcerative colitis
Combined endpoint may support personalised medicine in ulcerative colitis
Filgotinib seems promising for perianal fistulising Crohn’s disease
Upadacitinib maintenance therapy delivers sustained improvements in active ulcerative colitis
Upadacitinib counters extraintestinal manifestations in ulcerative colitis
Deucravacitinib does not meet primary endpoint for ulcerative colitis
Head-to-Head Comparisons
Anti-TNFs versus vedolizumab and ustekinumab in Crohn’s disease
Upadacitinib appears to be an efficacious therapy for moderately-to-severely ulcerative colitis
Subcutaneous infliximab versus subcutaneous vedolizumab in IBD
Vedolizumab outperforms anti-TNF in biologic-naïve ulcerative colitis
Short-Term and Long-Term Treatment Results
Ozanimod treatment shows maintained response in ulcerative colitis
Stopping infliximab but not antimetabolites leads to more relapses in Crohn’s disease
Vedolizumab first approved therapy for chronic pouchitis
VEDOKIDS: Vedolizumab seems effective in paediatric IBD
Primary endpoint of 5-hydroxytryptophan for fatigue in IBD not met
Specific Therapeutic Strategies
Positive outcomes with therapeutic drug monitoring during infliximab maintenance therapy
Segmental colectomy beneficial over total colectomy in Chrohn’s disease
Modified 2-stage ileal pouch-anal anastomosis versus 3-stage alternative
Similar results for different corticosteroid tapering protocols in UC
Miscellaneous Topics
Lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic for IBD management
AI model distinguishes between histologic activity and remission in ulcerative colitis
Multi-Omic and dietary analysis of Crohn’s disease identifies pathogenetic factors
Novel classification system for perianal fistulising Crohn’s disease
Vaccination tool associated with improved vaccination coverage in IBD
Comparable safety profiles of biological therapies in elderly patients with IBD
Early biologic therapy induces larger effect than delayed treatment in Crohn’s disease
RESTORE-UC: No better outcomes with FMT superdonors than with autologous stools
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