Randomised controlled trial of long-term maintenance corticosteroid therapy in patients with autoimmune pancreatitis

Atsushi Masamune(Tohoku University), Isao Nishimori, Kazuhiro Kikuta(Tohoku University), Ichiro Tsuji(Tohoku University), Nobumasa Mizuno(Aichi Cancer Center), Tatsuo Iiyama(Kochi Medical School Hospital), Atsushi Kanno(Tohoku University), Yuichi Tachibana(Kyushu University), Tetsuhide Ito(Kyushu University), Terumi Kamisawa(Tokyo Metropolitan Komagome Hospital), Kazushige Uchida(Kansai Medical University), Hideaki Hamano(Shinshu University Hospital), Hiroaki Yasuda(Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine), Junichi Sakagami(Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine), Akira Mitoro(Nara Medical University), Masashi Taguchi(University of Occupational and Environmental Health Japan), Yasuyuki Kihara, Hiroyuki Sugimoto(Nagoya University), Yoshiki Hirooka(Nagoya University Hospital), Satoshi Yamamoto(Fujita Health University), Kazuo Inui(Fujita Health University), Osamu Inatomi(Shiga University of Medical Science), Akira Andoh(Shiga University of Medical Science), Kazuyuki Nakahara(Kumamoto Medical Center), Hiroyuki Miyakawa(Sapporo Kosei General Hospital), Shin Hamada(Tohoku University), Shigeyuki Kawa(Shinshu University), Kazuichi Okazaki(Kansai Medical University), Tooru Shimosegawa(Tohoku University)
Gut
August 19, 2016
Cited by 199

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Corticosteroid has been established as the standard therapy for autoimmune pancreatitis (AIP), but the requirement for maintenance corticosteroid therapy is controversial. We conducted a randomised controlled trial to clarify the efficacy of maintenance corticosteroid therapy in patients with AIP. DESIGN: We conducted a multicentre, tertiary setting, randomised controlled trial. After the induction of remission with the initial oral prednisolone (PSL) treatment, maintenance therapy with PSL at 5-7.5 mg/day was continued for 3 years or withdrawn at 26 weeks. The primary endpoint was relapse-free survival over 3 years and the secondary endpoint was serious corticosteroid-related complications. All analyses were performed on an intention-to-treat basis. RESULTS: Between April 2009 and March 2012, 49 patients with AIP were randomly assigned to the maintenance therapy group (n=30) or the cessation group (n=19). Baseline characteristics were not different between the two groups. Relapses occurred within 3 years in 11 out of 19 (57.9%) patients assigned to the cessation group, and in 7 of 30 (23.3%) patients in the maintenance therapy group. The relapse rate over 3 years was significantly lower in the maintenance therapy group than that in the cessation group (p=0.011). The relapse-free survival was significantly longer in the maintenance therapy group than that in the cessation group (p=0.007). No serious corticosteroid-related complications requiring discontinuation of PSL were observed. CONCLUSIONS: Maintenance corticosteroid therapy for 3 years may decrease relapses in patients with AIP compared with those who discontinued the therapy at 26 weeks. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: UMIN000001818; Results.


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