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A doctor examines the belly of a child at a clinic.
Crohn’s disease is a chronic inflammatory bowel disease, which, since its harder to treat in children, can impair growth, psychosocial development, and puberty.

Pediatric Crohn’s Disease Clinical Trial Yields Game-Changing Outcomes

Findings revealed the efficacy of anti-TNF inhibitors monotherapy versus combination therapy with anti-TNF inhibitors and immunosuppressants

University of North Carolina School of Medicine
Published:Apr 04, 2023
|3 min read
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Crohn’s disease is a lifelong inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) that is characterized by swelling in the lining of the digestive tract, causing severe diarrhea, abdominal pain, and rectal bleeding. For pediatric patients, the disease is harder to treat. If untreated, it can impair growth, psychosocial development, and puberty.

A significant clinical trial under the direction of Michael Kappelman, MD, MPH, professor of pediatrics at UNC School of Medicine, found that patients receiving the tumor necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitor, adalimumab, combined with a low dose of methotrexate, a second immunosuppressant, did better than those treated with adalimumab alone. However, patients initiating infliximab, another TNF inhibitor, had similar outcomes with or without methotrexate.

Their findings were published in Gastroenterology, the leading journal in the field of gastrointestinal disease.

Adalimumab and infliximab—the key drugs of interest—belong to a class of medications called anti-inflammatory TNF inhibitors. These medications suppress the body's natural response to TNF, a protein that is produced by white blood cells during inflammatory events. Adalimumab was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in 2014 for treatment in pediatric patients with Crohn’s disease, and infliximab was approved in 2006.

“We know that both adalimumab and infliximab have proven to be effective and safe,” said Kappelman. “We also know that they don't work for all patients and don't work forever. This pivotal trial comparing anti-TNF alone or in combination with methotrexate has provided clear results that can immediately impact patient care.”

Crohn’s disease and “data desert”

The clinical trial had been in the works for a decade. Starting with the important decision of which research question was the most urgent and pressing need, Kappelman then engaged key stakeholder groups collaborating with ImproveCareNow—a national pediatric community that brings together medical professionals, patients, and families to advance care through research and quality improvement, support for psychosocial functioning and mental health, and escalating initiatives to address disparities, equity, and inclusivity.

David Wohl, MD, professor of medicine in the Division of Infectious Diseases in UNC’s Department of Medicine, joined ImproveCareNow soon after his son was diagnosed with pediatric Crohn’s disease at nine years old. He was surprised at how little evidence there was behind treatment decisions.

“I became vocal about the ‘data desert’ parents like me have to wander through to find answers,” said Wohl. “I immediately joined as a parent representative and became active in the organization and at our UNC site. My superpower was not only being a parent of a child with IBD but also a clinician-researcher.”

After Wohl’s son started seeing Kappelman for clinical care, they spoke about a need for better clinical trial data. Kappelman then approached Wohl with an idea, which would later become a landmark clinical trial. Subsequently, Wohl assumed a lead role in patient and parent engagement and enrollment, along with Lisa Pitch from Nevada and other parents through ImproveCareNow.

“To see the study now provide us with a clear answer about what medicines work best in kids with Crohn’s is incredibly gratifying,” said Wohl. “It is truly a game-changer.”

Kappelman and his team, with UNC-Chapel Hill acting as the lead site, were successful in obtaining an $8-million funding award from the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) and substantial co-funding from the Helmsley Charitable Trust. They recruited and followed patients at over thirty centers across the country, rigorously collecting, quality checking, and analyzing data, and synthesizing results. Two of the sites were located in North Carolina—one at UNC Children’s Hospital and another at Levine Children’s Hospital in Charlotte.

“We are grateful to our funders and to the hundreds of physicians and staff at sites across the country who worked hard to make this project a success,” said Kappelman. “Most importantly, we would like to thank all of the patients and families who bravely and generously volunteered to be part of this study.”

The results will also be presented at Digestive Disease Week, a prestigious meeting hosted by the American Gastroenterological Association.

- This press release was originally published on the UNC School of Medicine website