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Baseline Characteristics of Adult Patients Treated and Never Treated with Teduglutide in a Multinational Short Bowel Syndrome and Intestinal Failure Registry

Gabriel E Gondolesi, Ulrich-Frank Pape, Joel B Mason, Johane P Allard, Loris Pironi, María Núria Virgili Casas, Lauren K Schwartz, Francisca Joly, André Gabriel, Sasan Sabrdaran, Pinggao Zhang, Martina Kohl-Sobania, Yi-Wen Huang*, Palle B Jeppesen

*Corresponding author for this work
4 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The Short Bowel Syndrome (SBS) Registry (NCT01990040) is a multinational real-world study evaluating the long-term safety of teduglutide in patients with SBS and intestinal failure (SBS-IF) in routine clinical practice. This paper describes the study methodology and baseline characteristics of adult patients who have (ever-treated) or have never (never-treated) received teduglutide. A total of 1411 adult patients (679 ever-treated; 732 never-treated) were enrolled at 124 sites across 17 countries. The mean (standard deviation [SD]) age at enrollment was 55.4 (15.46) years, and 60.2% of patients were women. Crohn's disease was the most common cause of major intestinal resection in both ever-treated (34.1%) and never-treated patients (20.4%). A similar proportion of ever-treated and never-treated patients had a prior history of colorectal polyps (2.7% vs. 3.6%), whereas proportionally fewer ever-treated patients reported a history of colorectal cancer (1.8% vs. 6.2%) or any malignancy (17.7% vs. 30.0%) than never-treated patients. Never-treated patients received a numerically greater mean (SD) volume of parenteral nutrition and/or intravenous fluids than ever-treated patients (12.4 [8.02] vs. 10.1 [6.64] L/week). Ever-treated patients received a mean teduglutide dosage of 0.05 mg/kg/day. This is the first report of patient baseline characteristics from the SBS Registry, and the largest cohort of patients with SBS-IF to date. Overall, ever-treated and never-treated patients had similar baseline characteristics. Differences between treatment groups may reflect variations in patient selection and degree of monitoring.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2513
JournalNutrients
Volume16
Issue number15
Number of pages15
ISSN2072-6643
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Aug 2024

Keywords

  • Humans
  • Short Bowel Syndrome/drug therapy
  • Female
  • Registries
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Peptides/therapeutic use
  • Adult
  • Aged
  • Gastrointestinal Agents/therapeutic use
  • Intestinal Failure/drug therapy
  • Treatment Outcome
  • Crohn Disease/drug therapy

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