PMID-38873891 – Long-term Teduglutide in Pediatric SBS

PMID-38873891 – Long-term Teduglutide in Pediatric SBS

Wales PW, Chiba M, Masumoto K, Nagelkerke SCJ, et al. Long-term Outcomes of Teduglutide in Pediatric Patients With Short Bowel Syndrome-Associated Intestinal Failure: A Pooled Post Hoc Analysis. J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr. 2024;79(1):94-103.

Quick Reference

Property Value
PMID 38873891
DOI 10.1002/jpn3.12276
Year 2024
Journal Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition
Study Type Pooled Post Hoc Analysis
Evidence Level III
Sample n=85 pediatric patients pooled from Phase III trials and extensions (up to 96 weeks)
Peptide(s) Studied GLP-2

Key Findings

  • Pooled analysis of 85 children with SBS-IF treated with teduglutide 0.05 mg/kg/day for up to 96 weeks across multiple studies
  • 82.1% of patients achieved a clinical response (>=20% reduction in parenteral support) over the pooled observation period
  • Mean parenteral fluid volume decreased by 30.1 mL/kg/day from baseline, representing a substantial reduction in IV dependence
  • Parenteral support reductions were durable and progressive through 96 weeks, without evidence of a treatment plateau
  • Several patients achieved enteral autonomy during the extended treatment period, confirming the potential for curative-intent therapy
  • Long-term safety was consistent with the known profile; no new safety signals emerged with extended exposure; growth remained on trajectory

Study Design

Pooled post hoc analysis combining data from two Phase III pediatric teduglutide studies and their open-label extension studies. Included all pediatric patients (aged 1-17 years) who received at least one dose of teduglutide. Assessed efficacy (parenteral support reduction, clinical response rate, enteral autonomy) and safety outcomes over up to 96 weeks of continuous treatment.

Limitations

  • Post hoc pooled analysis, not a prospectively designed long-term study; inherent selection bias as patients who discontinued early are underrepresented in later time points
  • Open-label design for extension period introduces observer bias
  • No concurrent placebo comparator for the long-term data, making it difficult to fully attribute outcomes to treatment vs natural adaptation
  • Heterogeneous patient population (varying ages, etiologies, remnant anatomy) limits ability to identify predictors of response

Clinical Relevance

This is the most comprehensive long-term pediatric teduglutide dataset published to date. The 82.1% response rate and sustained reductions over 96 weeks confirm that GLP-2 receptor agonism produces durable intestinal adaptation in children, not merely a transient effect. The progressive nature of the benefit supports extended treatment courses. For the GLP-2 peptide profile, this study provides the strongest evidence that long-term teduglutide therapy can meaningfully reduce or eliminate parenteral nutrition dependence in pediatric SBS-IF.

Related

#research #observational #glp-2 #evidence-level-III