Poster Session II - A282 CLINICAL OUTCOMES AND DRUG SUSTAINABILITY AFTER NON-MEDICAL SWITCH FROM USTEKINUMAB ORIGINATOR TO BIOSIMILARS IN INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASE
J Kritzinger, P Lakatos, G Kotrri, T Bessissow, I Candel, W Afif, A Bitton, H Nadeem, G Wild

TL;DR
Switching IBD patients from ustekinumab originator to biosimilar maintains treatment effectiveness and safety.
Contribution
First real-world evaluation of non-medical switching to ustekinumab biosimilars in IBD patients.
Findings
Drug sustainability remained high (95-96%) after switching to biosimilar.
Clinical remission rates and biomarker activity were stable post-switch.
Abstract
Biologic therapies have transformed the management of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), yet their high cost poses substantial challenges for healthcare systems. Biosimilars offer a cost-effective alternative, with extensive evidence supporting the safety and efficacy of non-medical switching for infliximab and adalimumab. However, real-world data on ustekinumab biosimilars in IBD remain limited. Given increasing mandates for non-medical switches in Canada, evaluating clinical outcomes is critical to ensure patient safety and treatment sustainability. We hypothesized that switching from originator ustekinumab to a biosimilar would preserve clinical efficacy, safety, and drug persistence in patients with IBD. To evaluate clinical efficacy, drug sustainability, biomarker activity and adverse events (AEs) in IBD patients who underwent non-medical biosimilar switching from ustekinumab…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBiosimilars and Bioanalytical Methods · Inflammatory Bowel Disease · Microscopic Colitis
