Treat-to-target of endoscopic remission in patients with inflammatory bowel disease in symptomatic remission on advanced therapies (QUOTIENT): rationale, design and protocol for an open-label, multicentre, pragmatic, randomised controlled trial. Journal Articles uri icon

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abstract

  • INTRODUCTION: Targeted immunomodulators (eg, advanced therapies) effectively achieve symptomatic remission in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). However, ~25%-50% of patients with IBD achieving symptomatic remission with an advanced therapy may have continued endoscopically/radiologically active bowel inflammation, and it is uncertain whether changing alternative advanced therapies in asymptomatic patients with IBD will reduce bowel inflammation and achieve durable deep remission. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: The QUality Outcomes Treating IBD to Target (QUOTIENT) study is an open-label, multicentre, pragmatic, randomised, controlled trial that aims to compare the efficacy and safety of switching to an alternative advanced therapy targeting endoscopic/radiological remission (treat-to-target) versus continuing the initial, or index, advanced therapy, in asymptomatic patients with IBD with moderate-to-severe endoscopic/radiological bowel inflammation. Enrolment is planned for ~250 participants in Canada/USA, randomised 1:1 to switching to alternative advanced therapy or continuing index advanced therapy, and then followed 104 weeks within routine clinical practice. Patient-reported outcomes measure efficacy and quality of life/treatment burden/safety. Primary endpoint is the time from randomisation to treatment failure. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The study is conducted in compliance with the protocol, ICH Good Clinical Practice, applicable regulatory requirements and appropriate review boards/independent ethics committees (approval numbers: Pro00077486; Pro00061437; STUDY00002062; 22-004171; i22-01269; IRB22-0890; IRB_00154397; 2000032384; SHIRB#2022.095-2; STUDY00007146; MMC#2024-18; REB#125290; 17784; Pro00142214; 20240660-01H), with documented written informed consent. Findings will be disseminated through peer-reviewed journals, scientific presentations, and publicly available Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) websites, including lay summaries. The Crohn's & Colitis Foundation Education, Support, and Advocacy Department, and our patient advocacy stakeholder, will develop educational and marketing resources to communicate findings to a broad audience (>250 000 patients/caregivers/healthcare professionals). TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT05230173.

authors

  • Singh, Siddharth
  • Nguyen, Jasmine D
  • Fudman, David I
  • Gerich, Mark E
  • Shah, Samir A
  • Hudesman, David
  • McConnell, Ryan A
  • Lukin, Dana J
  • Flynn, Ann D
  • Hwang, Caroline
  • Sprung, Brandon
  • Gaidos, Jill KJ
  • Mattar, Mark C
  • Rubin, David T
  • Hashash, Jana G
  • Metwally, Mark
  • Ali, Tauseef
  • Ma, Christopher
  • Hoentjen, Frank
  • Narula, Neeraj
  • Bessissow, Talat
  • Rosenfeld, Greg
  • McCurdy, Jeffrey D
  • Ananthakrishnan, Ashwin N
  • Cross, Raymond K
  • Rodriguez Gaytan, Jorge R
  • Gurrola, Emily-Sophinie
  • Patel, Sagar
  • Siegel, Corey A
  • Melmed, Gil Y
  • Weaver, S Alandra
  • Power, Sydney
  • Zou, Guangyong
  • Jairath, Vipul
  • Hou, Jason K

publication date

  • March 31, 2025