# Higher Anti-Drug Antibody Levels to Anti-Tumor Necrosis Factor Therapies Are Associated with Treatment Failure in Patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease

**Authors:** Alessandra Saraga, Tina Deyhim, Ajay Gade, Grace Geeganage, Mostafa Soliman, Nathan David Vanshelboym Rothschild, Samantha Zullow, Loren G. Rabinowitz, Laurie B. Grossberg, Adam S. Cheifetz, Konstantinos Papamichael

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jcm15020547 · 2026-01-09

## TL;DR

Higher levels of antibodies against anti-TNF drugs are linked to treatment failure in inflammatory bowel disease patients.

## Contribution

This study identifies specific antibody thresholds that predict treatment failure in IBD patients using anti-TNF therapies.

## Key findings

- Higher anti-drug antibody levels significantly correlate with treatment failure in IBD patients.
- Thresholds of 5.2 U/mL for adalimumab and 8.8 U/mL for infliximab antibodies predict treatment failure.
- The study used a large cohort and time-to-event analysis to establish these associations.

## Abstract

Background/Objectives: There is limited data regarding the association of anti-drug antibody (ADA) levels with the efficacy of anti-tumor necrosis factor (anti-TNF) therapy in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). We aimed to investigate the association between antibody to adalimumab (ATA) and antibody to infliximab (ATI) levels and treatment failure in IBD. Methods: This single-center, retrospective cohort study included consecutive IBD patients with ADA evaluated with a drug-tolerant assay between September 2012 and February 2023. A time-to-event analysis was performed for treatment failure, defined as the need for drug discontinuation due to primary non-response, loss of response, a serious adverse event, or an IBD-related surgery. Patients were followed from first positive ADA until treatment failure or the end of the follow-up (May 2024). Results: The study population consisted of 134 patients with IBD [n = 58 (43%) on adalimumab; n = 86, (64%) with Crohn’s disease]. Multiple COX regression analysis identified higher ADA levels to be associated with treatment failure (HR: 1.034, 95%CI: 1.024–1.045, p < 0.001). A ROC analysis identified an ATA and ATI level threshold of 5.2 U/mL (AUC: 0.705; 95%CI: 0.569–0.841; p = 0.003; sensitivity: 64%; specificity: 82%) and 8.8 U/mL (AUC: 0.809; 95%CI: 0.713–0.906; p < 0.001; sensitivity: 69%; specificity: 93%), respectively, to distinguish patients with or without treatment failure. Conclusions: In this large retrospective cohort study, higher levels of ADA were associated with treatment failure to anti-TNF therapy in IBD. Moreover, we identified ATA and ATI level thresholds of 5.2 U/mL and 8.8 U/mL, respectively, to be associated with treatment failure.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** inflammatory bowel disease (MONDO:0005265), Crohn’s disease (MONDO:0005011)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** TNF (tumor necrosis factor) [NCBI Gene 7124] {aka DIF, IMD127, TNF-alpha, TNFA, TNFSF2, TNLG1F}
- **Diseases:** IBD (MESH:D015212), Crohn's disease (MESH:D003424)
- **Chemicals:** infliximab (MESH:D000069285), adalimumab (MESH:D000068879), ATA (-)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12842080/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12842080