Comparison of Medical RESCUE Strategies for Patients With Steroid-refractory Acute Severe Ulcerative Colitis

NCT ID: NCT06660693

Last Updated: 2025-06-22

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

RECRUITING

Clinical Phase

PHASE3

Total Enrollment

134 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2025-04-16

Study Completion Date

2027-09-30

Brief Summary

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This study aims to examine patients with acute severe UC who are refractory to intravenous corticosteroids and determine whether a strategy of using upadacitinib first followed by infliximab in upadacitinib non-responders is non-inferior to conventional management with infliximab only.

Detailed Description

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In acute hospitalized severe, steroid refractory UC, only two medical rescue therapies have been found efficacious in controlled trials and recommended in management, infliximab and cyclosporine. Due to toxicity and nuance in using cyclosporine, infliximab is by far the most commonly used medical rescue therapy in this setting. There is emerging retrospective and prospective case series data suggesting JAK inhibitors, such as tofacitinib or upadacitinib, could also be used for this patient population. JAK inhibitors offer potential advantages including convenience of oral therapy, efficacy independent of serum albumin levels, and no concern for immunogenicity as is seen with anti-TNFs. They also offer a short half-life and are eliminated by humans within 48 hours of the last dose administered. This could be beneficial, as it may offer a chance to use a JAK inhibitor first and switch to infliximab in patients who do not respond to a JAK inhibitor, as theoretically cumulative immunosuppression should not be as high transitioning from a JAK inhibitor to infliximab, as compared to using JAK inhibitor after infliximab failure since there will still be lots of infliximab present owing to its long half-life. It is unclear how JAK inhibitors compare to our standard of care and where they should be positioned in acute severe UC. This study aims to examine patients with acute severe UC who are refractory to intravenous corticosteroids and determine whether a strategy of using upadacitinib first followed by infliximab in upadacitinib non-responders is non-inferior to conventional management with infliximab only.

Conditions

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Colitis, Ulcerative

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Open-label, pragmatic, multi-centre, randomized control trial.
Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Upadacitinib (treatment arm)

Participants will receive Upadacitinib 45mg daily, once a day, for at least five days.

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

Upadacitinib Oral Product

Intervention Type DRUG

Upadacitinib oral 45mg once daily.

Infliximab (standard care)

Participants will receive standard care, which is Infliximab.

Group Type NO_INTERVENTION

No interventions assigned to this group

Interventions

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Upadacitinib Oral Product

Upadacitinib oral 45mg once daily.

Intervention Type DRUG

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Confirmed diagnosis of UC, based on conventional clinical, endoscopic, and/or histologic criteria
* Admitted to hospital with acute severe flare and refractory to three days of intravenous steroids (at minimum of 40mg methylprednisolone, or equivalent, daily). Refractory is defined using the Oxford criteria at day 3 of steroid therapy: presence of \> 8 stools/day or CRP \> 45 mg/L
* Will undergo or has already undergone a baseline colonoscopy or flexible sigmoidoscopy while in hospital or in the 4 weeks preceding trial entry, with a baseline MES ≥2 based on locally evaluated endoscopy
* Provided written informed consent
* Subject is willing and able to adhere to study procedures, and describe in the procedures that screening and safety monitoring procedures will be applied as per upadacitinib and infliximab Canadian product monographs

Exclusion Criteria

* Contraindications to receiving either infliximab or upadacitinib (as per current Canadian product monograph)
* Previously used infliximab or a JAK inhibitor for UC
* Patients \> 65 years of age
* Pregnant or breastfeeding
* Women of reproductive potential who are unwilling to agree to using effective contraception during treatment and 4 weeks following the final dose of upadacitinib
* Concurrent Clostridium difficile, other gastrointestinal infection, or other active systemic or localized infection which would preclude treatment with systemically acting biologic or small molecule therapy
* Patients with symptoms of thrombosis, or confirmed venous or arterial thromboembolism
* Active TB (patients should be tested for TB prior to upadacitinib or infliximab treatment)
* HBV/HCV positive
* Untreated malignancy or ongoing treatment for malignancy
* Concomitant treatment with strong CYP3A4 inhibitors or inducers
* Severe hepatic impairment
* Severe renal impairment (CrCl \< 30 ml/min)
* Patients who have received live vaccines in the 28 days prior to study entry.
* Patients with moderate or severe (NYHA Class III/IV) congestive heart failure.
* Patients with a history of hypersensitivity to infliximab, to other murine proteins, or to any of the excipients.
* Patients who are hypersensitive to upadacitinib or to any ingredient in the formulation, including any non-medicinal ingredient, or component of the container.
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

64 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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AbbVie

INDUSTRY

Sponsor Role collaborator

McMaster University

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Neeraj Narula

Principal Investigator

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Locations

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Hamilton Health Sciences

Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

Site Status RECRUITING

Countries

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Canada

Central Contacts

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Neeraj Narula

Role: CONTACT

905-521-2011

Facility Contacts

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Neeraj Narula, MD

Role: primary

905-521-2100

Other Identifiers

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RESCUE-UC

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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