Aim: – to assess the effectiveness and safety of Risankizumab (RZB) in a large, nationwide real-world cohort of Crohn’s disease (CD) patients.Methods: – We conducted a multicentre, retrospective observational cohort of adults initiating RZB with assessments at weeks 12, 26, and 52. Co-primary endpoints were (i) week-12 steroid-free clinical remission (SFCR) (HBI <5 in the absence of systemic corticosteroids or budesonide) and (ii) week-52 endoscopic remission (SES-CD 0–2 or Rutgeerts i0–i1 post-operatively). The main effectiveness analysis was as-observed; a preplanned sensitivity analysis included patients expected to reach week-52 before database lock and applied non-responder imputation.Results: – We included 520 patients, 45.0% failed ≥3 and 54.8% were ustekinumab-exposed. At week 12, clinical response was 76.5% and 60.8% achieved SFCR. By week 52, SFCR was 65.6%; endoscopic remission occurred in 37.5%, while radiologic remission and transmural healing were 24.6% and 9.8%, respectively. Ustekinumab-naïve patients showed significantly superior early clinical outcomes (week-12 SFCR: 69.8% vs 53.3%) and a higher rate of endoscopic remission at week 52 (56.5% vs 28.6%) compared with ustekinumab-exposed patients. Notably, week-52 effectiveness was comparable between patients with 2 and those with ≥3 prior failures. Extra-intestinal manifestations decreased over time, while perianal disease improved modestly. In the sensitivity cohort (N = 213), SFCR was 47% at week-52. Risankizumab was well-tolerated with no new safety signals identified.Conclusions: – In a large, refractory, real-world CD population, RZB induced rapid and sustained favorable clinical, endoscopic, and radiologic outcomes. Importantly, one-year effectiveness was similar in patients with 2, and ≥3 prior failures, supporting RZB as a valuable option for a refractory population.
Multicenter Real-World Outcomes of Risankizumab in Crohn's Disease: The RESOLVE IG-IBD Study
Spagnuolo, Rocco;
2026-01-01
Abstract
Aim: – to assess the effectiveness and safety of Risankizumab (RZB) in a large, nationwide real-world cohort of Crohn’s disease (CD) patients.Methods: – We conducted a multicentre, retrospective observational cohort of adults initiating RZB with assessments at weeks 12, 26, and 52. Co-primary endpoints were (i) week-12 steroid-free clinical remission (SFCR) (HBI <5 in the absence of systemic corticosteroids or budesonide) and (ii) week-52 endoscopic remission (SES-CD 0–2 or Rutgeerts i0–i1 post-operatively). The main effectiveness analysis was as-observed; a preplanned sensitivity analysis included patients expected to reach week-52 before database lock and applied non-responder imputation.Results: – We included 520 patients, 45.0% failed ≥3 and 54.8% were ustekinumab-exposed. At week 12, clinical response was 76.5% and 60.8% achieved SFCR. By week 52, SFCR was 65.6%; endoscopic remission occurred in 37.5%, while radiologic remission and transmural healing were 24.6% and 9.8%, respectively. Ustekinumab-naïve patients showed significantly superior early clinical outcomes (week-12 SFCR: 69.8% vs 53.3%) and a higher rate of endoscopic remission at week 52 (56.5% vs 28.6%) compared with ustekinumab-exposed patients. Notably, week-52 effectiveness was comparable between patients with 2 and those with ≥3 prior failures. Extra-intestinal manifestations decreased over time, while perianal disease improved modestly. In the sensitivity cohort (N = 213), SFCR was 47% at week-52. Risankizumab was well-tolerated with no new safety signals identified.Conclusions: – In a large, refractory, real-world CD population, RZB induced rapid and sustained favorable clinical, endoscopic, and radiologic outcomes. Importantly, one-year effectiveness was similar in patients with 2, and ≥3 prior failures, supporting RZB as a valuable option for a refractory population.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


