Prospective studies important
The researchers note that up to 50% of patients with IBD are exposed to TNFi prior to their first surgery. They also note that there is concern that preoperative treatment with these and other immunosuppressive medications may increase the risk of postoperative infections.
However, the evidence is inconsistent, they write, so whether to continue or stop the drugs prior to surgery remains controversial.
“A lot of the initial studies in the perioperative population were single-center and retrospective for the most part,” Dr. Cohen said, adding that the studies used different modes of assessment and followed different time frames.
“So, there’s a lot of heterogeneity,” he said.
In addition, early studies of TNFi were often conducted with patients who were very ill and who had started receiving the drug right before surgery, and they sometimes had a complication Dr. Cohen said. “But you don’t know if that’s because of the drug itself or because of many other factors associated with them being very sick, such as being on steroids, being very malnourished, or having other complications of disease.”
It is difficult to control for such risk factors in retrospective analyses because the information is not always available from medical records, he said. “That’s why it’s so important to study clinical questions like this in a prospective manner.”
Dr. Cohen added that it is important that studies such as theirs continue to be undertaken as new drugs become available.
“We’re entering an era of rapidly expanding drug discovery, so we’re going to have new medications available for use in our patients with IBD,” he explained. “It’s important that we continue to build prospective cohorts to look at questions such as the safety of medications in the perioperative period, rather than solely relying on retrospective data.”
The study was funded by a Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation Senior Research Award. Dr. Cohen reports relationships with AbbVie, Celgene, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Pfizer, Sublimity Therapeutics, Target RWE, Janssen, Ferring, AlphaSigma, and Takeda. Other authors report numerous financial relationships. Dr. Hanauer reports relationships with Janssen, AbbVie, Pfizer, Amgen, Genentech, and Merck.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.