Wenjin Wang
Pfizer
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Publication
Featured researches published by Wenjin Wang.
Gut | 2017
Julián Panés; William J. Sandborn; Stefan Schreiber; Bruce E. Sands; Severine Vermeire; Geert R. D'Haens; Remo Panaccione; Peter D. Higgins; Jean-Frederic Colombel; B. Feagan; Gary Chan; Michele Moscariello; Wenjin Wang; Wojciech Niezychowski; Amy Marren; Paul J. Healey; Eric Maller
Objective Tofacitinib is an oral, small-molecule Janus kinase inhibitor that is being investigated for IBD. We evaluated the efficacy and safety of tofacitinib for induction and maintenance treatment in patients with moderate-to-severe Crohns disease (CD). Design We conducted two randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicentre phase IIb studies. Adult patients with moderate-to-severe CD were randomised to receive induction treatment with placebo, tofacitinib 5 or 10 mg twice daily for 8 weeks. Those achieving clinical response-100 or remission were re-randomised to maintenance treatment with placebo, tofacitinib 5 or 10 mg twice daily for 26 weeks. Primary endpoints were clinical remission at the end of the induction study, and clinical response-100 or remission at the end of the maintenance study. Results 180/280 patients randomised in the induction study were enrolled in the maintenance study. At week 8 of induction, the proportion of patients with clinical remission was 43.5% and 43.0% with 5 and 10 mg twice daily, respectively, compared with 36.7% in the placebo group (p=0.325 and 0.392 for 5 and 10 mg twice daily vs placebo). At week 26 of maintenance, the proportion of patients with clinical response-100 or remission was 55.8% with tofacitinib 10 mg twice daily compared with 39.5% with tofacitinib 5 mg twice daily and 38.1% with placebo (p=0.130 for 10 mg twice daily vs placebo). Compared with placebo, the change in C-reactive protein from baseline was statistically significant (p<0.0001) with 10 mg twice daily after both induction and maintenance treatments. Conclusions Primary efficacy endpoints were not significantly different from placebo, although there was evidence of a minor treatment effect. No new safety signals were observed for tofacitinib. Trial registration numbers NCT01393626 and NCT01393899.
Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2015
B. Jharap; William J. Sandborn; W. Reinisch; G. D'Haens; Anne M. Robinson; Wenjin Wang; Bidan Huang; Andreas Lazar; Roopal Thakkar; J.-F. Colombel
Associations between patient‐reported outcomes and mucosal healing have not been established in ulcerative colitis (UC).
Gut | 2018
Stuart Bloom; Gary R. Lichtenstein; Edward V. Loftus; Nervin Lawendy; Gary S. Friedman; Haiying Zhang; Wenjin Wang; Andrew John Thorpe; Chudy I. Nduaka; Chinyu Su
Introduction Tofacitinib is an oral, small molecule JAK inhibitor that is being investigated for ulcerative colitis (UC). The efficacy and safety of tofacitinib was demonstrated as induction and maintenance therapy in 3 Phase 3, randomised, placebo-controlled studies (OCTAVE Induction 1, NCT01465763; OCTAVE Induction 2, NCT01458951; OCTAVE Sustain, NCT01458574) in patients (pts) with moderate to severe UC.1 Methods We present interim safety and efficacy data up to 3 years of treatment (as of 8 July 2016) from an ongoing Phase 3, multicentre, open-label, long-term extension study (OLE; NCT01470612) in pts who had completed or demonstrated treatment failure in OCTAVE Sustain, or who were non-responders after completing OCTAVE Induction 1 or 2. Pts in remission at Week 52 of OCTAVE Sustain received tofacitinib 5 mg twice daily (BID); all others received 10 mg BID. At Month 2, all pts underwent endoscopy, and non-responders from Induction were mandated to withdraw if no evidence of clinical response was shown. Remission was defined by a Mayo score ≤2 with no individual subscore >1, and rectal bleeding subscore of 0. Binary efficacy endpoints were derived from Mayo score, based on local-read endoscopic subscore. Results 914 pts (5 mg BID, n=156 [17.1%]; 10 mg BID, n=758 [82.9%]) received ≥1 dose of study drug; 381 pts (41.7%) discontinued. The most frequent AE leading to discontinuation was worsening of UC. The most frequent treatment-emergent AEs by system organ class (both doses) were ‘infections/infestations’ and ‘gastrointestinal disorders’, and by preferred term were ‘nasopharyngitis’ and ‘worsening of UC’. Serious infections AEs were reported in 4 (2.6%) and 14 (1.8%) pts with 5 and 10 mg BID, respectively. Malignancies excl. NMSC were reported in 9 (1.2%) pts in the 10 mg BID group (no clustering of malignancy type); none were reported in the 5 mg BID group. No new safety risks were identified. Data ‘as observed’ for remission and mucosal healing at Months 2, 12 and 24 are shown. Conclusions In pts with moderate to severe UC who remained in the OLE study, no new safety concerns emerged compared with those observed with tofacitinib in rheumatoid arthritis. Efficacy results from this OLE study support sustained efficacy with tofacitinib 5 and 10 mg BID. Funded by Pfizer Inc.Abstract PTU-001 Table 1 Summary of safety and efficacy is the OLE study Reference 1. Sandborn WJ, et al. N Engl J Med 2017;376:1723–36.
Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology | 2014
William J. Sandborn; Subrata Ghosh; Julián Panés; Ivana Vranic; Wenjin Wang; Wojciech Niezychowski; Severine Vermeire; Olivier Dewit; Harald Peeters; Jiri Stehlik; Tomas Vanasek; David Laharie; Jean-Frederic Colombel; Marc-André Bigard; Marta Varga; Margit Zeher; Janos Novak; B. Hunyady; Ágnes Salamon; István Rácz; Paolo Gionchetti; Anna Kohn; Cosimo Prantera; Pieter Stokkers; Maria Slomka; Leszek Paradowski; Tomasz Arlukowicz; Ladislav Kuzela; Boris Baricky; Tibor Hlavaty
Gastroenterology | 2016
Julián Panés; William J. Sandborn; Stefan Schreiber; Bruce E. Sands; Severine Vermeire; Gary Chan; Michele Moscariello; Wenjin Wang; Wojciech Niezychowski; Amy Marren; Paul J. Healey; Eric S. Maller
Gastroenterology | 2016
Geert R. D'Haens; Remo Panaccione; Peter D. Higgins; Jean-Frederic Colombel; Brian G. Feagan; Michele Moscariello; Gary Chan; Paul J. Healey; Wojciech Niezychowski; Wenjin Wang; Amy Marren; Eric S. Maller
Journal of Crohns & Colitis, 10 . S18-S19. | 2016
Julián Panés; W. Sandborn; Stefan Schreiber; Bruce E. Sands; S. Vermeire; Gary Chan; Michele Moscariello; Wenjin Wang; Wojciech Niezychowski; Amy Marren; Paul J. Healey; Eric Maller
Gastroenterology | 2018
Bruce E. Sands; Julián Panés; Peter D. Higgins; Michele Moscariello; Gary Chan; Chinyu Su; Wenjin Wang; Eric S. Maller
Gastroenterology | 2018
Brian G. Feagan; Marla Dubinsky; Milan Lukas; Daniel Quirk; Chudy I. Nduaka; Eric S. Maller; Nervin Lawendy; Cem Kayhan; Wenjin Wang; Gary Chan; Chinyu Su
Gastroenterology | 2018
Brian G. Feagan; Christina Y. Ha; Pam R. Taub; Daniel Quirk; Chudy I. Nduaka; Leonardo Salese; Gary Chan; Gary S. Friedman; Wenjin Wang; Chinyu Su; Walter Reinisch