Budesonide as induction therapy for incomplete microscopic colitis: A randomised, placebo-controlled multicentre trial

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

  • Andreas Münch
  • Emese Mihaly
  • Ferenc Nagy
  • Ahmed Madisch
  • Juozas Kupčinskas
  • Stephan Miehlke
  • Johan Bohr
  • Gerd Bouma
  • Jordi Guardiola
  • Blanca Belloc
  • Chunliang Shi
  • Daniela Aust
  • Ralf Mohrbacher
  • Roland Greinwald
  • Munck, Lars Kristian

Background and aims: Incomplete microscopic colitis (MCi) is a subtype of microscopic colitis (MC). Budesonide is recommended as a first-line treatment for MC. However, randomised trials on efficacy of treatment in MCi are missing. We therefore performed a randomised, placebo-controlled trial to evaluate budesonide as induction therapy for MCi. Methods: Patients with active MCi were randomly assigned to either budesonide 9 mg once daily or placebo for 8 weeks in a double-blind, double-dummy design. The primary endpoint was clinical remission, defined as a mean of <3 stools/day and a mean of <1 watery stool/day in the 7 days before week 8. Results: Due to insufficient patient recruitment, the trial was discontinued prematurely. The intention-to-treat analysis included 44 patients (21 budesonide and 23 placebo). The primary endpoint of clinical remission at week 8 was obtained by 71.4% on budesonide and 43.5% on placebo (p = 0.0582). All clinical secondary endpoints were in favour of budesonide. Budesonide decreased the number of soft or watery stools (16.3 vs. 7.7, p = 0.0186) and improved health-related quality of life for all four dimensions of the short health scale. Adverse events with a suspected relation to study drug were reported in one patient in the budesonide group and two patients in the placebo group. Neither serious nor severe adverse events occurred during the double-blind phase. Conclusions: Budesonide decreased the frequency of soft or watery stools and improved the patients' quality of life significantly in MCi, but the primary endpoint was not met due to the low sample size (type 2 error). Budesonide was safe and well tolerated during the 8-weeks treatment course.

Original languageEnglish
JournalUnited European Gastroenterology Journal
Volume9
Issue number7
Pages (from-to)837-847
ISSN2050-6406
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The Authors. United European Gastroenterology Journal published by Wiley Periodicals LLC. on behalf of United European Gastroenterology.

    Research areas

  • budesonide, drug, incomplete microscopic colitis, induction therapy, MCi, microscopic colitis, QoL, quality of life, randomised clinical trial, watery diarrhoea

ID: 278483326