Biochemical efficacy of tioguanine in autoimmune hepatitis:a retrospective review of practice in the Netherlands

BACKGROUND: Azathioprine (AZA) and mercaptopurine (MP) are the cornerstone of steroid-sparing strategies in autoimmune hepatitis (AIH). Up to 20% of patients do not tolerate or respond to these regimens. AIM: To evaluate retrospectively the tolerability and efficacy of tioguanine (thioguanine) (TG) therapy in selected patients with AIH and AIH variant syndromes. METHODS: Records of 52 patients who received TG therapy were retrieved from nine hospitals in the Netherlands. Indications for TG treatment were intolerable side effects on AZA or MP (n = 38), insufficient response (n = 11) or first-li... Mehr ...

Verfasser: van den Brand, Floris F
van Nieuwkerk, Carin M J
Verwer, Bart J
de Boer, Ynto S
de Boer, Nanne K H
Mulder, Chris J J
Bloemena, Elisabeth
Bakker, Christine M
Vrolijk, Jan M
Drenth, Joost P H
Tan, Adriaan C I T L
Ter Borg, Frank
Ter Borg, Martijn J
van den Hazel, Sven J
Inderson, Akin
Tushuizen, Maarten E
Bouma, Gerd
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2018
Reihe/Periodikum: van den Brand , F F , van Nieuwkerk , C M J , Verwer , B J , de Boer , Y S , de Boer , N K H , Mulder , C J J , Bloemena , E , Bakker , C M , Vrolijk , J M , Drenth , J P H , Tan , A C I T L , Ter Borg , F , Ter Borg , M J , van den Hazel , S J , Inderson , A , Tushuizen , M E & Bouma , G 2018 , ' Biochemical efficacy of tioguanine in autoimmune hepatitis : a retrospective review of practice in the Netherlands ' , Alimentary pharmacology & therapeutics , vol. 48 , no. 7 , pp. 761-767 . https://doi.org/10.1111/apt.14939
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-29216118
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://research.vumc.nl/en/publications/61800423-91cf-42b1-98f8-49c556609519

BACKGROUND: Azathioprine (AZA) and mercaptopurine (MP) are the cornerstone of steroid-sparing strategies in autoimmune hepatitis (AIH). Up to 20% of patients do not tolerate or respond to these regimens. AIM: To evaluate retrospectively the tolerability and efficacy of tioguanine (thioguanine) (TG) therapy in selected patients with AIH and AIH variant syndromes. METHODS: Records of 52 patients who received TG therapy were retrieved from nine hospitals in the Netherlands. Indications for TG treatment were intolerable side effects on AZA or MP (n = 38), insufficient response (n = 11) or first-line treatment (n = 3). Treatment efficacy was defined as normalisation of serum aminotransferases and serum immunoglobulin G. RESULTS: No serious adverse events occurred in patients treated with TG during a median follow-up of 18 months (range 1-194). Treatment was well tolerated in 41 patients (79%), whereas four had tolerable (8%) and seven (13%) intolerable side effects. Thirty-eight patients were treated with TG after intolerable side effects on AZA or MP; 29 patients continued TG therapy of whom 24 (83%) achieved complete biochemical remission, four (14%) had incomplete and one (3%) had no response; nine discontinued treatment. Seven of 11 patients with insufficient response to AZA or MP were responsive to TG, three with complete and four with incomplete biochemical remission; four discontinued due to intolerance (n = 2) and non-response (n = 2). TG was effective in all AIH patients as first-line maintenance treatment. CONCLUSION: In our retrospective review of TG therapy in selected patients with AIH or AIH variants who previously failed on AZA or MP, TG appeared tolerable with biochemical efficacy.