Abstract :
[en] BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Crohn's disease negatively affects patients' quality of life and ability to work. We investigated the impact of adalimumab on work productivity, daily activities, and quality of life in an open-label trial (N=945). The population comprised both infliximab-naive and -exposed patients, including infliximab primary non-responders. METHODS: Patients received adalimumab induction therapy (160mg/80mg at Weeks 0/2), followed by adalimumab 40mg every other week for up to 20weeks (patients with flares/non-response could receive 40mg weekly at/after Week 12). The Work Productivity and Activity Impairment Questionnaire and Short Inflammatory Bowel Disease Questionnaire were assessed. Indirect cost savings were estimated based on the average work productivity improvements at Week 20. RESULTS: Mean baseline scores indicated severe productivity impairment and poor quality of life. At Week 20, 60% of infliximab-naive and 47% of infliximab primary non-responders achieved clinically important improvements (>/=9 points) on the Short Inflammatory Bowel Disease Questionnaire, and 51% and 43%, respectively, achieved the minimum clinically important difference (improvement >/=7 percentage points) for total work productivity impairment (non-responder imputation). At Week 20, 64% of infliximab-naive and 55% of infliximab primary non-responders achieved clinically important improvements in total activity impairment. Estimated 20-week total indirect productivity-related cost savings were euro3070 per infliximab-naive patient and euro2059 per infliximab-exposed patient. CONCLUSIONS: Adalimumab therapy significantly improved work productivity and disease-specific quality of life for patients with moderate to severe Crohn's disease. Patients who failed prior infliximab therapy and patients naive to infliximab benefited from adalimumab, with potentially greater benefits for infliximab-naive patients (NCT00409617).
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