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. 2016 Jul 11;2016:2079582. doi: 10.1155/2016/2079582

Table 2.

Comparison between early and late initiators of anti-TNF therapy for colectomy, hospitalization, and clinical secondary loss of response requiring dose escalation during maintenance infliximab or adalimumab.

Early initiation of anti-TNF Late initiation of anti-TNF p value
Colectomy outcomes
 Colectomy (n, %) 10 (17.5) 5 (8.6) 0.16
 Colectomy rate (per 100 patient-years, 95% CI) 6.0 [2.9–11.0] 2.7 [0.9–6.2] 0.13
 Median time to colectomy after anti-TNF (weeks, IQR) 49.1 (35.3–125.6) 119.0 (86.9–197.0) 0.61

Indications for colectomy
 Medically refractory disease 8 (80.0) 3 (60.0) 0.34
 Disease-related complication 2 (20.0) 1 (20.0)
 Dysplasia or colorectal malignancy 0 (0) 1 (20.0)

Surgical urgency (%)
 Elective surgery 5 (50.0) 4 (80.0) 0.26
 Emergent surgery 5 (50.0) 1 (20.0)

Clinical hospitalization outcomes
 UC-related hospitalization (n, %) 25 (43.9) 16 (27.6) 0.07
 UC-related hospitalization rate (per 100 patient-years, 95% CI) 26.8 [19.6–35.9] 13.9 [9.1–20.4] 0.01
 Median time to first UC-related hospitalization (weeks, IQR) 25.6 (8.6–68.7) 52.5 (28.9–96.4) 0.08

Clinical secondary loss of response outcomes
 Secondary loss of response requiring dose escalation (n, %) 28 (49.1) 34 (58.6) 0.31
 Secondary loss of response rate (per 100 patient-years, 95% CI) 16.7 [11.1–24.1] 18.2 [12.6–25.4] 0.74
 Median time to dose escalation (weeks, IQR) 43.6 (23.6–70.9) 48.2 (23.4–109.9) 0.80

Early anti-TNF initiation defined as receiving first induction dose of infliximab or adalimumab within three years of diagnosis.