Drug Repurposing in Crohn's Disease Using Danish Real-World Data

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Drug Repurposing in Crohn's Disease Using Danish Real-World Data. / Shakibfar, Saeed; Allin, Kristine H; Jess, Tine; Barbieri, Maria Antonietta; Battini, Vera; Simoncic, Eva; Kirchgesner, Julien; Ulven, Trond; Sessa, Maurizio.

In: Pragmatic and observational research, Vol. 15, 2024, p. 17-29.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Shakibfar, S, Allin, KH, Jess, T, Barbieri, MA, Battini, V, Simoncic, E, Kirchgesner, J, Ulven, T & Sessa, M 2024, 'Drug Repurposing in Crohn's Disease Using Danish Real-World Data', Pragmatic and observational research, vol. 15, pp. 17-29. https://doi.org/10.2147/POR.S444569

APA

Shakibfar, S., Allin, K. H., Jess, T., Barbieri, M. A., Battini, V., Simoncic, E., Kirchgesner, J., Ulven, T., & Sessa, M. (2024). Drug Repurposing in Crohn's Disease Using Danish Real-World Data. Pragmatic and observational research, 15, 17-29. https://doi.org/10.2147/POR.S444569

Vancouver

Shakibfar S, Allin KH, Jess T, Barbieri MA, Battini V, Simoncic E et al. Drug Repurposing in Crohn's Disease Using Danish Real-World Data. Pragmatic and observational research. 2024;15:17-29. https://doi.org/10.2147/POR.S444569

Author

Shakibfar, Saeed ; Allin, Kristine H ; Jess, Tine ; Barbieri, Maria Antonietta ; Battini, Vera ; Simoncic, Eva ; Kirchgesner, Julien ; Ulven, Trond ; Sessa, Maurizio. / Drug Repurposing in Crohn's Disease Using Danish Real-World Data. In: Pragmatic and observational research. 2024 ; Vol. 15. pp. 17-29.

Bibtex

@article{970c80a330694807a983cf777be71c79,
title = "Drug Repurposing in Crohn's Disease Using Danish Real-World Data",
abstract = "AIM: Drug repurposing, utilizing electronic healthcare records (EHRs), offers a promising alternative by repurposing existing drugs for new therapeutic indications, especially for patients lacking effective therapies. Intestinal fibrosis, a severe complication of Crohn's disease (CD), poses significant challenges, increasing morbidity and mortality without available pharmacological treatments. This article focuses on identifying medications associated with an elevated or reduced risk of fibrosis in CD patients through a population-wide real-world data and artificial intelligence (AI) approach.METHODS: Patients aged 65 or older with a diagnosis of CD from 1996 to 2019 in the Danish EHRs were followed for up to 24 years. The primary outcome was the need of specific surgical procedures, namely proctocolectomy with ileostomy and ileocecal resection as proxies of intestinal fibrosis. The study explored drugs linked to an increased or reduced risk of the study outcome through machine-learning driven survival analysis.RESULTS: Among the 9179 CD patients, 1029 (11.2%) underwent surgery, primarily men (58.5%), with a mean age of 76 years, 10 drugs were linked to an elevated risk of surgery for proctocolectomy with ileostomy and ileocecal resection. In contrast, 10 drugs were associated with a reduced risk of undergoing surgery for these conditions.CONCLUSION: This study focuses on repurposing existing drugs to prevent surgery related to intestinal fibrosis in CD patients, using Danish EHRs and advanced statistical methods. The findings offer valuable insights into potential treatments for this condition, addressing a critical unmet medical need. Further research and clinical trials are warranted to validate the effectiveness of these repurposed drugs in preventing surgery related to intestinal fibrosis in CD patients.",
author = "Saeed Shakibfar and Allin, {Kristine H} and Tine Jess and Barbieri, {Maria Antonietta} and Vera Battini and Eva Simoncic and Julien Kirchgesner and Trond Ulven and Maurizio Sessa",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2024 Shakibfar et al.",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.2147/POR.S444569",
language = "English",
volume = "15",
pages = "17--29",
journal = "Pragmatic and observational research",
issn = "1179-7266",
publisher = "Taylor & Francis",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Drug Repurposing in Crohn's Disease Using Danish Real-World Data

AU - Shakibfar, Saeed

AU - Allin, Kristine H

AU - Jess, Tine

AU - Barbieri, Maria Antonietta

AU - Battini, Vera

AU - Simoncic, Eva

AU - Kirchgesner, Julien

AU - Ulven, Trond

AU - Sessa, Maurizio

N1 - © 2024 Shakibfar et al.

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - AIM: Drug repurposing, utilizing electronic healthcare records (EHRs), offers a promising alternative by repurposing existing drugs for new therapeutic indications, especially for patients lacking effective therapies. Intestinal fibrosis, a severe complication of Crohn's disease (CD), poses significant challenges, increasing morbidity and mortality without available pharmacological treatments. This article focuses on identifying medications associated with an elevated or reduced risk of fibrosis in CD patients through a population-wide real-world data and artificial intelligence (AI) approach.METHODS: Patients aged 65 or older with a diagnosis of CD from 1996 to 2019 in the Danish EHRs were followed for up to 24 years. The primary outcome was the need of specific surgical procedures, namely proctocolectomy with ileostomy and ileocecal resection as proxies of intestinal fibrosis. The study explored drugs linked to an increased or reduced risk of the study outcome through machine-learning driven survival analysis.RESULTS: Among the 9179 CD patients, 1029 (11.2%) underwent surgery, primarily men (58.5%), with a mean age of 76 years, 10 drugs were linked to an elevated risk of surgery for proctocolectomy with ileostomy and ileocecal resection. In contrast, 10 drugs were associated with a reduced risk of undergoing surgery for these conditions.CONCLUSION: This study focuses on repurposing existing drugs to prevent surgery related to intestinal fibrosis in CD patients, using Danish EHRs and advanced statistical methods. The findings offer valuable insights into potential treatments for this condition, addressing a critical unmet medical need. Further research and clinical trials are warranted to validate the effectiveness of these repurposed drugs in preventing surgery related to intestinal fibrosis in CD patients.

AB - AIM: Drug repurposing, utilizing electronic healthcare records (EHRs), offers a promising alternative by repurposing existing drugs for new therapeutic indications, especially for patients lacking effective therapies. Intestinal fibrosis, a severe complication of Crohn's disease (CD), poses significant challenges, increasing morbidity and mortality without available pharmacological treatments. This article focuses on identifying medications associated with an elevated or reduced risk of fibrosis in CD patients through a population-wide real-world data and artificial intelligence (AI) approach.METHODS: Patients aged 65 or older with a diagnosis of CD from 1996 to 2019 in the Danish EHRs were followed for up to 24 years. The primary outcome was the need of specific surgical procedures, namely proctocolectomy with ileostomy and ileocecal resection as proxies of intestinal fibrosis. The study explored drugs linked to an increased or reduced risk of the study outcome through machine-learning driven survival analysis.RESULTS: Among the 9179 CD patients, 1029 (11.2%) underwent surgery, primarily men (58.5%), with a mean age of 76 years, 10 drugs were linked to an elevated risk of surgery for proctocolectomy with ileostomy and ileocecal resection. In contrast, 10 drugs were associated with a reduced risk of undergoing surgery for these conditions.CONCLUSION: This study focuses on repurposing existing drugs to prevent surgery related to intestinal fibrosis in CD patients, using Danish EHRs and advanced statistical methods. The findings offer valuable insights into potential treatments for this condition, addressing a critical unmet medical need. Further research and clinical trials are warranted to validate the effectiveness of these repurposed drugs in preventing surgery related to intestinal fibrosis in CD patients.

U2 - 10.2147/POR.S444569

DO - 10.2147/POR.S444569

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 38404739

VL - 15

SP - 17

EP - 29

JO - Pragmatic and observational research

JF - Pragmatic and observational research

SN - 1179-7266

ER -

ID: 384865333