A biomarker-stratified comparison of top-down versus accelerated step-up treatment strategies for patients with newly diagnosed Crohn's disease (PROFILE): a multicentre, open-label randomised controlled trial
University of Cambridge · Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust · +41 more institutions
Abstract
Management strategies and clinical outcomes vary substantially in patients newly diagnosed with Crohn's disease. We evaluated the use of a putative prognostic biomarker to guide therapy by assessing outcomes in patients randomised to either top-down (ie, early combined immunosuppression with infliximab and immunomodulator) or accelerated step-up (conventional) treatment strategies.
PROFILE (PRedicting Outcomes For Crohn's disease using a moLecular biomarker) was a multicentre, open-label, biomarker-stratified, randomised controlled trial that enrolled adults with newly diagnosed active Crohn's disease (Harvey-Bradshaw Index ≥7, either elevated C-reactive protein or faecal calprotectin or both, and endoscopic evidence of active inflammation). Potential participants had blood drawn to be tested for a prognostic biomarker derived from T-cell transcriptional signatures (PredictSURE-IBD assay). Following testing, patients were randomly assigned, via a secure online platform, to top-down or accelerated step-up treatment stratified by biomarker subgroup (IBDhi or IBDlo), endoscopic inflammation (mild, moderate, or severe), and extent (colonic or other). Blinding to biomarker status was maintained throughout the trial. The primary endpoint was sustained steroid-free and surgery-free remission to week 48. Remission was defined by a composite of symptoms and inflammatory markers at all visits. Flare required active symptoms (HBI ≥5) plus raised inflammatory markers (CRP >upper limit of normal or faecal calprotectin ≥200 μg/g, or both), while remission was the converse-ie, quiescent symptoms (HBI
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 128.78
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 30
Authors
117- NMNurulamin M Noor
University of Cambridge, Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
- JLJames Lee
The Francis Crick Institute, The Royal Free Hospital, University College London
- SBSimon Bond
University of Cambridge, Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, MRC Biostatistics Unit, Medical Research Council
- FDFrancis Dowling
Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
- BBBiljana Brezina
Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Crohn's disease
- Open label
- Randomized controlled trial
- Biomarker
- Disease
- Internal medicine
- Oncology
- Good health and well-being
Funding
- WTWellcome Trust
- UHUniversity Hospitals Bristol NHS Foundation Trust
- QEQueen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham Charity
- NINational Institute for Health and Care ResearchAward: NIHR203312
- UOUniversity of Cambridge
- KCKing's College London
- CUCambridge University Hospitals
- CACrohn's and Colitis UK
- MRMedical Research CouncilAward: MR/W018861/1
- NCNIHR Cambridge Biomedical Research CentreAward: NIHR203312