Area Editoriale
Clinical trial: cyclophosphamide pulse therapy - a promising therapeutic alternative in refractory Crohn's disease. Schmidt KJ, Fellermann K, Wellhöner P, Weitz G, Homann N, Herrlinger K, Lehnert H, Ludwig D, Büning J. Aliment Pharmacol Ther. 2009;29:1230-9.
BACKGROUND: In severe steroid-refractory Crohn's disease (CD), established therapies fail in a relevant proportion of patients. Recent pilot studies indicated the efficacy of cyclophosphamide pulse therapy in these patients. AIM: To provide further and substantial evidence for the rationale to apply cyclophosphamide pulse therapy as therapeutic option in severe courses of CD. METHODS: Fifteen patients with steroid-refractory (n = 13) or steroid-dependent (n = 2) CD received 2-6 (median 3) monthly pulses of 750 mg cyclophosphamide in an open-label fashion. Eleven patients were on concomitant immunosuppression (azathioprine/mercaptopurine n = 9; methotrexate n = 2). RESULTS: Thirteen of 15 patients (87%) had a clinical response (CDAI decrease >100). Ten patients (67%) went into remission (CDAI <150) after 8 weeks. Steroid-free remission was achieved in eight patients (54%). Two patients (13%) failed to respond. Median CDAI decreased from 420 (245-550) to 100 (26-538) at week 8. Remission lasted 16 months (median, range 4-40). In three patients, arthritis, erythema nodosum and episcleritis completely resolved. Cyclophosphamide pulse therapy administration was well tolerated in all subjects. CONCLUSIONS: Cyclophosphamide pulse therapy is safe and highly effective for induction and maintenance of remission in steroid-refractory/-dependent CD. There is a strong need for additional experience to improve the setting of the encouraging cyclophosphamide treatment in CD.