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10/30/2013 New Treatment Paradigms in the Management of Metastatic Breast Cancer Sara A. Hurvitz, MD, FACP Assistant Professor of Medicine Director, Breast Oncology Program, UCLA Co-Director, Outpatient Oncology Clinics SM-UCLA Medical Director, Clinical Research Unit, Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center/UCLA Objectives • Review efficacy and safety of current & emerging therapies for MBC • Implement strategies to improve survival in patients whose MBC has progressed after previous treatment courses • Implement ASCO and NCCN guidelines for management of patients with MBC • Differentiate among the different taxanes used in MBC • Analyze strategies for reducing disease and treatmentrelated AEs associated with new and emerging therapies 1 10/30/2013 FIGURE 1 Ten Leading Cancer Types for Estimated New Cancer Cases by Sex, US, 2013 Siegel et al. CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians 2013 Volume 63 FIGURE 1 Ten Leading Cancer Types for Estimated Cancer Deaths by Sex, US, 2013 Siegel et al. CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians 2013 Volume 63 2 10/30/2013 How many in US have MBC? Incidence and prevalence of stage IV breast cancer are not formally collected but estimated that >160,000 are living with MBC in the US Molecular heterogeneity of breast cancer 3 10/30/2013 An Enduring Paradigm Rudolf Ludwig Karl Virchow (1821-1902) Die Krankhaften Geschwülste 1863 Types of Invasive Breast Cancer: Distinguishing Subtypes Based on Microscopic Appearance Type of Cancer Frequency Associated features Infiltrating Ductal 70-80% When DCIS is associated, goal is to obtain surgical margins clear of both invasive tumor and DCIS to reduce risk of recurrence Invasive Lobular 5-10% Mucinous/Colloid 2.4% Well circumscribed, tumor cells dispersed in large pools of extracellular mucus; uniform, low grade nuclei, prognostically favorable variant of invasive breast carcinoma. Metaplastic <5% Poorly differentiated ductal carcinoma combined with squamous cell carcinoma and/or various forms of sarcomatous differentiation; tends to be resistant to chemotherapy Tubular <5% Well differentiated, low-grade, unusual pre-mmg era, now more common, indolent and rarely metastasizes Medullary <5% Poorly differentiated, lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate, prognosis more favorable despite aggressive histologic features, associated with BRCA1, usually ER-PR- Micropapillary <5% Aggressive with lymph node metastases even when small Adenoid cystic <5% Rare, morphologically identical to that of salivary glands, tends to be favorable prognosis, LCIS or DCIS; higher freq bilateral & multicentric, spread to unusual locations (meninges, peritoneum, GI) Li, et al. Br J Cancer. 2005 Oct 31;93(9):1046-52; UpToDate 2006 4 10/30/2013 Revolutionary Realization: Breast Cancer is Not All One Disease Sorlie et al PNAS 2001 HER2+ MBC 5 10/30/2013 Identifying and Exploiting the Molecular Underpinnings of Breast Cancer: HER2 Normal (1X) ~20,000-50,000 HER2 receptors Overexpressed HER2 (10-100X) Up to ~2,000,000 HER2 receptors HER2 is overexpressed in ~25% of breast cancers Pegram et al. Cancer Treat Res. 2000;103:57. Ross and Fletcher. Am J Clin Pathol. 1999;112(suppl 1):S53. Slamon et al. Science. 1987;235:177. Excessive cellular division Trastuzumab Has Changed the Natural History of HER2+ Breast Cancer Burstein H. N Engl J Med. 2005;353(16):1652-1654. 6 10/30/2013 Trastuzumab Has Changed the Natural History of HER2+ Metastatic Breast Cancer • Patients with HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer (MBC) now have comparable outcomes with HER2-negative MBC Probability of Survival, % 100 HER2 positive, trastuzumab (n = 191) HER2 negative (n = 1782) HER2 positive, no trastuzumab (n = 118) 80 60 40 20 0 0 12 24 36 48 60 Dawood S, et al. J Clin Oncol. 2010;28(1):92-98. HER2+ Advanced Breast Cancer: Major Clinical Advances Phase 3 of pertuzumab TRAS approved (advanced) Lapatinib approved (advanced) Phase 2 randomized trial of T-DM1 Phase 3 of everolimus Pertuzumab approved (advanced) 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Initial trials of T-DM1, pertuzumab, neratinib, afatinib White = clinical study results prior to 2013. Orange = regulatory approvals prior to 2013. Yellow = clinical study results reported and regulatory approval in 2013. Adapted from Krop I. SABCS 2011, Abst ES1-3. T-DM1 phase 3 reported T-DM1 2nd phase 3 report T-DM1 approved (advanced) 14 7 10/30/2013 Prognosis of HER2+ MBC Population-Level Influence of Trastuzumab • Trastuzumab approved in 1998 for HER2+ MBC • Model of effect of trastuzumab on life expectancy over 15 years (19992013) Danese M. ASCO 2013. Abstract 625. HER2+ MBC First-line setting 8 10/30/2013 Latest Developments in HER2-Targeted First-line (Metastatic) Treatment Trastuzumab plus chemotherapy HER2-targeted agent plus endocrine therapy (post-menopausal, ER+) Pertuzumab plus trastuzumab plus taxane Under investigation: T-DM1 Everolimus Chemotherapy Plus Trastuzumab in Metastatic Disease Slamon et al n = 469 Marty et al n = 186 AC or T* vs AC or T→H† Docetaxel vs Docetaxel →H† Treatment arms P value P value Time to Disease Progression (mos) 4.6 7.4 < 0.001 6.1 11.7 0.0001 Response Rate 32% 50% < 0.001 34% 61% 0.0002 Median Overall Survival (mos) 20 25 0.046 23 31 0.0325 *T = paclitaxel; †H = trastuzumab. Hudis CA. N Engl J Med. 2007;357:36-51; Slamon DJ, et al. N Engl J Med. 2001;344:783-792 ; Marty M, et al. J Clin Oncol. 2005;23:4265-4267. 9 10/30/2013 Recommended First-line Combinations With Trastuzumab • HER2+ disease without previous trastuzumab: trastuzumab plus – – – – – – Paclitaxel ± carboplatin Vinorelbine Capecitabine Docetaxel Docetaxel/pertuzumab (approved June 2012) Paclitaxel/pertuzumab • HER2+ disease with previous trastuzumab – Ado-trastuzumab emtansine (T-DM1) – Lapatinib + capecitabine – Trastuzumab plus: - Other first-line agents - Capecitabine - Lapatinib (without cytotoxic therapy) NCCN. Clinical practice guidelines in oncology: breast cancer. v.2.2013. Hormonal Therapy in HER2Positive Metastatic Breast Cancer Regimen ORR, % Median PFS, Mos Trastuzumab (N = 114; HER2 positive n = 79)[1] 26 3.5-3.8 Anastrozole/trastuzumab (n = 103)[2] 20 4.8 Anastrozole (n = 104)[2] 7 2.4 28 8.2 Letrozole (n = 644)[3] 15 3.0 Lapatinib (N = 138)[4] 24 NA Lapatinib/letrozole (n = 642)[3] 1. Vogel C, et al. J Clin Oncol. 2002;20:719-726. 2. Kaufman B, et al. J Clin Oncol. 2009;27:5529-5537. 3. Johnston S, et al. J Clin Oncol. 2009;27:5538-5546. 4. Gomez HL, et al. J Clin Oncol. 2008;26:2999-3005. 10 10/30/2013 HER dimerization (receptor pairing) is essential for HER activity HER1/EGFR HER2 HER3 HER2 has no known ligand and constitutively exists in an “open” state, ready to pair with other HER proteins HER4 HER3 although able to bind several ligands, lacks intrinsic tyrosine kinase activity HER3 receptor has the strongest phosphorylation potential Effects of ligand binding to the HER3 receptor HER3 Ligand binds Conformational change from “closed” to “open” state Exposes the dimerization domain and allows the formation of dimers Triggers intracellular signaling pathways through transphosphorylation 11 10/30/2013 Effects of ligand binding to the HER3 receptor HER3 Ligand binds Conformational change from “closed” to “open” state Exposes the dimerization domain and allows the formation of dimers Triggers intracellular signaling pathways through transphosphorylation Effects of ligand binding to the HER3 receptor HER3 Ligand binds Conformational change from “closed” to “open” state Exposes the dimerization domain and allows the formation of dimers Triggers intracellular signaling pathways through transphosphorylation 12 10/30/2013 Effects of ligand binding to the HER3 receptor HER3 Ligand binds Conformational change from “closed” to “open” state Exposes the dimerization domain and allows the formation of dimers Triggers intracellular signaling pathways through transphosphorylation Effects of ligand binding to the HER3 receptor HER3 Ligand binds Conformational change from “closed” to “open” state Exposes the dimerization domain and allows the formation of dimers Triggers intracellular signaling pathways through transphosphorylation 13 10/30/2013 Effects of ligand binding to the HER3 receptor HER3 Ligand binds Conformational change from “closed” to “open” state Exposes the dimerization domain and allows the formation of dimers Triggers intracellular signaling pathways through transphosphorylation Effects of ligand binding to the HER3 receptor HER2 HER3 Ligand binds Conformational change from “closed” to “open” state Exposes the dimerization domain and allows the formation of dimers Triggers intracellular signaling pathways through transphosphorylation 14 10/30/2013 Effects of ligand binding to the HER3 receptor Ligand binds HER3 HER2 Conformational change from “closed” to “open” state Exposes the dimerization domain and allows the formation of dimers Triggers intracellular signaling pathways through transphosphorylation P P P P P P P P P P P P AKT P13K PDK1 mTOR P BAD Cyclin D1 P GSK3 NFB survival p27 P P angiogenesis proliferation cell cycle control ↓ apoptosis Pertuzumab: a HER dimerization inhibitor HER3 HER2 Pertuzumab A mechanism of action designed to bind to the HER dimerization domain • By targeting HER2, the preferred pairing partner for HER1, HER3 and HER4, pertuzumab may inhibit multiple HER signaling pathways P P P P P AKT P13K • PDK1 GSK3 NFB mTOR BAD Cyclin D1 p27 angiogenesis proliferation cell cycle control survival ↓ apoptosis 15 10/30/2013 CLEOPATRA: Study Design Women with previously untreated, HER2-positive locally recurrent/metastatic breast cancer (N = 808) Primary endpoint: PFS (independently assessed) Secondary endpoints: PFS (investigator assessment), ORR, OS, Safety Trastuzumab 6 mg/kg q3w* + Docetaxel 75-100 mg/m2 q3w† + Pertuzumab 420 mg q3w‡ (n = 402) Trastuzumab 6 mg/kg q3w* + Docetaxel 75-100 mg/m2 q3w† + Placebo q3w (n = 406) Treatment until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity *Trastuzumab 8 mg/kg loading dose given. †Minimum of 6 docetaxel cycles recommended; < 6 cycles permitted for unacceptable toxicity or PD. ‡Pertuzumab 840 mg loading dose given. Baselga J, et al. SABCS 2011. Abstract S5-5. CLEOPATRA: PFS Independent Assessment Baselga J, et al. N Engl J Med. 2012;366(2):109-119, Swain S, et al. 2013; Lancet Oncol. Epub ahead of print. 16 10/30/2013 CLEOPATRA: PFS by Previous Trastuzumab Therapy Patient Subgroup Median PFS, Mos HR (95% CI) Placebo + Trastuzumab + Docetaxel Pertuzumab + Trastuzumab + Docetaxel Previous (neo)adjuvant trastuzumab treatment (n = 88) 10.4 16.9 0.62 (0.35-1.07) No previous (neo)adjuvant trastuzumab treatment (n = 288) 12.6 21.6 0.60 (0.43-0.83) Baselga J, et al. N Engl J Med. 2012;366:109-119. CLEOPATRA: OS 1 year 100 94% Overall Survival (%) 90 2 years 89% 80 81% 3 years 70 66% 69% 60 HR = 0.66 95% CI 0.52 - 0.84 P = 0.0008 50 50% 40 30 20 Ptz + T + D: 113 events; median not reached Pta + T + D: 154 events; median 37.6 months 10 0 No. at Risk Time (months) 0 Ptz + T + D 402 Pta + T + D 406 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 387 383 371 350 342 324 317 285 230 198 143 128 84 67 33 22 9 4 0 0 0 0 Baselga J, et al. N Engl J Med. 2012;366(2):109-119, Swain S, et al. 2013; Lancet Oncol. Epub ahead of print. 17 10/30/2013 HER2+ MBC First-Line Under Investigation: T-DM1 Everolimus + trastuzumab/taxane T-DM1: Mechanism of Action HER2 T-DM1 Emtansine release P Inhibition of microtubule polymerization P P Lysosome Internalization Nucleus Adapted from LoRusso PM, et al. Clin Cancer Res 2011. 36 18 10/30/2013 TDM4450 Study Design Trastuzumab 8 mg/kg loading dose; 6 mg/kg q3w IV HER2-positive, recurrent locally advanced breast cancer or MBC (N=137) 1:1 + Docetaxel 75 or 100 mg/m2 q3w PDa Crossover to T-DM1 (optional) (n=70) T-DM1 3.6 mg/kg q3w IV PDa (n=67) • Randomized, phase II, international, open-label studyb • Stratification factors: World region, prior adjuvant trastuzumab therapy, disease-free interval • Primary end points: PFS by investigator assessment, and safety • Data analyses were based on clinical data cut of Nov 15, 2010 prior to T-DM1 crossover • Key secondary end points: OS, ORR, DOR, CBR, and QOL aPatients bThis were treated until PD or unacceptable toxicity. was a hypothesis generating study; the final PFS analysis was to take place after 72 events had occurred. Kaplan-Meier estimates of progression-free survival (PFS) in the overall study population. Hurvitz S A et al. JCO 2013;31:1157-1163 19 10/30/2013 TDM4450: Kaplan-Meier estimates of duration of response (DOR) by investigator. Hurvitz S A et al. JCO 2013;31:1157-1163 TDM4450: Summary of Adverse Events Safety Evaluable Patients a,b Trastuzumab + a T-DM1 (n=69) , docetaxel (n=66) , n (%) n (%) Any grade ≥3 AE 59 (89.4) 32 (46.4) AE leading to discontinuation of any study treatment component (any grade) 19 (28.8) 5 (7.2) 1 (1.5)c 1 (1.4)d 17 (25.8) 13 (18.8) AE leading to death Serious AEs (any grade) aTwo patients mistakenly received a dose of T-DM1 and were thus included in the T-DM1 arm for safety analyses. 3 patients who received at least 1 dose of trastuzumab alone or trastuzumab plus docetaxel. to cardiopulmonary failure. dDue to sudden death. bIncludes cDue 20 10/30/2013 1st Line mBC Phase III MARIANNE Study: BO22589/TDM4788g FPI July 6 2010 n=1092 Arm A Patients stratified by: Trastuzumab + taxane (until PD) n=364 World region Arm B Neo/Adjuvant therapy (Y/N) T-DM1 + pertuzumab (until PD) n=364 Trastuzumab and/or lapatinib based therapy (Y/N) Arm C T-DM1 + pertuzumab placebo (until PD) n=364 Visceral disease (Y/N) Patients with HER2 positive progressive or recurrent locally advanced breast cancer or previously untreated metastatic breast cancer Primary endpoints: PFS as assessed by IRF; Safety Secondary endpoints: OS; PFS by investigator; PRO analyses; Biomarkers Non-inferiority followed by Superiority analysis between each of the experimental arms and the control arm Interim futility analysis: Option to drop experimental arm BOLERO-1: EVE Phase III Trial Design (HER2+ ABC First Line) Key endpoints • Primary: PFS • Secondary: OS, ORR, CBR, safety, pharmacokinetics, biomarker/laboratory assessments; patient reported outcomes EVE + Paclitaxel + TRAS BOLERO-1 N = 719 • HER2+ ABC • No prior therapy for ABC • Stratified by prior neo/adjuvant TRAS R 2:1 (E: 10 mg/d) (P: 80 mg/m2 weekly, days 1, 8, 15) (T: 2 mg/kg, days 1, 8, 15) 28 day cycle Paclitaxel + TRAS (P: 80 mg/m2 weekly, days 1, 8, 15) (T: 2 mg/kg, days 1, 8, 15) 28-day cycle US National Institutes of Health. Available at: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT00876395. Accessed April 1, 2013. 21 10/30/2013 HER2+ MBC After Progression Therapies Available for Trastuzumab-Resistant Disease • Lapatinib plus capecitabine • Lapatinib plus trastuzumab • Trastuzumab plus capecitabine • T-DM1 • Emerging data: Pertuzumab/trastuzumab, everolimus Continuing HER2-blockade in trastuzumabresistant disease improves outcomes 22 10/30/2013 HER2 Beyond Progression Author Agents N TTP PFS OS Von Minckwitz et al Capecitabine + trastuzumab vs capecitabine 156 8.2 months vs 5.6 months, P = 0.03 NR 25.5 months vs 20.4 months P = 0.257 Geyer et al Capecitabine + lapatinib vs capecitabine 324 8.4 months vs 4.4 months, P < 0.001 8.4 months vs 4.1 months, P < 0.001 19 months vs 16 months P = 0.206 Blackwell et al Lapatinib + trastuzumab vs lapatinib 296 NR 12 weeks vs 8.1 weeks, P = 0.008 14 months vs 9.5 months, P = 0.026 Blackwell K, et al. J Clin Oncol. 2010;28(7):1124-1130; Blackwell K, et al. J Clin Oncol. Epub June 11, 2012; Geyer CE, et al. N Engl J Med. 2006;355:2733-2743; Cameron D, et al. Oncologist. 2010:15(9):924-934; Von Minckwitz G, et al. J Clin Oncol. 2009;27(12):1999-2006.. Combination of Lapatinib and Trastuzumab has Superior Anti-tumor Activity Treatment with lapatinib plus trastuzumab resulted in complete tumor remission Lapatinib induced accumulation of inactive HER2 at plasma membrane Effect was durable: no tumor relapse observed after 8 mo post treatment Trastuzumab-mediated cytotoxicity was higher with the addition of lapatinib in MCF7/HER2 cells In vivo activity was consistent with in vitro data demonstrating the combination as synergistic Reprinted by permission. Scaltriti, et al. Oncogene 2009;28(6):803-814 Konecny, et al. Cancer Res 2006;66:1630-1639; Xia, et al. Oncogene 2004;23: 646–653 23 10/30/2013 Phase III Trial: Lapatinib ± Trastuzumab in Heavily Pretreated MBC Following Progression on Trastuzumab N = 296 • HER2+ (FISH+/IHC 3+) • Progressed on most recent trastuzumab regimen • Prior anthracycline- and taxane-based regimens Lapatinib (1500 mg/day PO) (n = 148) R A N D O M I Z E Crossover if PD after 4 wk therapy (N = 73) Lapatinib (1000 mg/day PO) + Trastuzumab (4 mg/kg load → 2 mg/kg weekly) (n = 148) Primary endpoint: Progression-free survival: Investigator Secondary endpoints include: •Overall survival •Overall response rate •Clinical benefit rate •Quality of life •Safety FISH, fluorescence in situ hybridization; IHC, immunohistochemistry; PD, progressive disease Blackwell KL, et al. J Clin Oncol. 2010;28(7):1124-1130. Progression-Free Survival in ITT Alive Without Progression, Cumulative % 100 L N = 145 80 60 Progressed or died, n 128 127 Median, weeks 8.1 12.0 Hazard ratio (95% CI) 0.73 (0.57, 0.93) Log-rank P 40 L+T N = 146 .008 28% 6-month PFS 20 13% 0 0 L 10 53 20 30 40 Time From Randomization, weeks 21 13 5 50 60 0 ITT, intent-to-treat population; L, lapatinib; PFS, progression-free survival; T, trastuzumab Blackwell KL, et al. J Clin Oncol. 2010;28(7):1124-1130. 24 10/30/2013 Updated Overall Survival in ITT L N =145 Died, N (%) 113 (78) 105 (72) Median, months 80% L+T N =146 Hazard ratio (95% CI) 9.5 14 0.74 (0.57, 0.97) Log-rank P value .026 56% 70% 6 Month OS 41% 12 Month OS Blackwell KL, et al. J Clin Oncol. 2012;30(21):2585-2592. Lapatinib ± Trastuzumab in Heavily Pretreated MBC: Selected Adverse Events Adverse Event (All Grades), % Lapatinib + Trastuzumab (n = 149) Lapatinib (n = 146) P Value Nausea 28 28 NS Fatigue 21 19 NS Diarrhea* 60 48 .03 Rash 22 29 NS *7% grade 3/4 events on each treatment arm. Cardiac Events* Lapatinib + Trastuzumab (n = 149) Patients with events, N Lapatinib (n = 146) 8 3 Symptomatic, n 3 2 Therapy related, n 8 3 Deaths, n 1 0 *Defined by ≥ 20% LVEF drop compared with baseline and below institution’s lower limits of normal. Blackwell KL, et al. J Clin Oncol. 2010;28:1124-1130. 25 10/30/2013 Conclusions • Continuing HER2-blockade in face of trastuzumab-resistance is beneficial • Clinical evidence confirming preclinical data that dual blockade of HER2 is synergistic EMILIA: T-DM1 Phase III Trial Design Key endpoints • Primary: Progression-free survival (PFS, central assessment), safety, OS • Secondary: Objective response, duration of objective response, PFS (investigator review) • Stratification factors: World region, number of prior chemo regimens for ABC or unresectable LABC, presence of visceral disease EMILIA N = 978 •Postmenopausal •ABC •Prior taxane and progression on TRAS •Cardiac ejection fraction ≥50% •ECOG PS ≤1 T-DM1 R 1:1 (3.6 mg/kg IV q3w) Lapatinib + capecitabine (L: 1250 mg/d PO) (C: 1000 mg/m2 PO BID, days 1-14q3w) Estimated Study Completion Date: April 2014 1. Blackwell KL, et al. J Clin Oncol. 2012;20(suppl): Abstract LBA1. 2. Verma S, et al. N Engl J Med. 2012;367(12):183-1791. 26 10/30/2013 EMILIA: PFS by Independent Review Progression-Free Survival, % 100 80 Median, months No. Events CAP + LAP 6.4 304 T-DM1 9.6 265 Stratified HR = 0.65 (95% CI, 0.55, 0.77) P<.001 60 40 20 0 0 2 4 6 No. at risk by independent review: CAP+ LAP 496 404 310 176 T-DM1 495 419 341 236 8 10 12 129 183 73 130 53 101 14 16 18 TIme, months 35 72 25 54 14 44 20 22 24 26 28 30 9 30 8 18 5 9 1 3 0 1 0 0 CAP, capecitabine; LAP, lapatinib Verma S, et al. N Engl J Med. 2012;367(12):183-1791. EMILIA: OS Median No. of Months 85.2% (95% CI, 82.0-88.5) 1.0 LAP + CAP 25.1 182 T-DM1 30.9 149 64.7% (95% CI, 59.3-70.2) 0.8 Overall Survival, % No. of Events 78.4% (95% CI, 74.6-82.3) 0.6 0.4 51.8% (95% CI, 45.9-57.7) 0.2 Stratified HR: 0.68; (95% CI, 0.55-0.85); P<.001 Efficacy stopping boundary, P = .0037 HR: 0.73 0.0 8 10 12 14 No. at risk: LAP + CAP 496 471 453 435 0 2 4 6 16 18 20 Time, months 403 368 297 240 204 159 133 T-DM1 495 485 474 457 439 418 349 293 242 197 164 22 24 26 28 30 32 34 36 110 86 63 45 27 136 111 86 62 38 17 7 4 28 13 5 CAP, capecitabine; LAP, lapatinib Verma S, et al. N Engl J Med. 2012;367(12):183-1791. 27 10/30/2013 EMILIA: T-DM1 vs Capecitabine/Lapatinib ORR and DOR ORR DOR Median, Mos (95% CI) Difference: 12.7% (95% CI: 6.0-19.4; P = .0002) Cap + Lap Responding Patients (%) 40 30.8% 30 20 10 0 120/389 173/397 Cap + Lap T-DM1 Blackwell KL, et al. ASCO 2012. Abstract LBA1. 1.0 Proportion Progression Free 43.6% 50 T-DM1 6.5 (5.5-7.2) 12.6 (8.4-20.8) 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 26 28 30 Pts at Risk, n Cap + lap 120105 77 48 32 14 9 8 3 3 1 1 T-DM1 173159126 84 65 47 42 33 27 19 12 8 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 EMILIA: T-DM1 vs Lapatinib/Capecitabine Adverse T-DM1 vs Lapatinib/Capecitabine in HER2+ Events MBC (EMILIA): Adverse Events Overview Adverse Event, n (%) Cap + Lap (n = 488) T-DM1 (n = 490) All-grade adverse events 477 (97.7) 470 (95.9) Grade ≥ 3 adverse events 278 (57.0) 200 (40.8) 52 (10.7) 29 (5.9) Adverse events leading to death on treatment 5 (1.0) 1 (0.2) LVEF < 50% and ≥ 15-point decrease from baseline 7 (1.6) 8 (1.7) Adverse events leading to treatment discontinuation (for any study drug) Blackwell KL, et al. ASCO 2012. Abstract LBA1. 28 10/30/2013 TH3RESA Study Schema HER2-positive (central) advanced BCa (N=600) ≥2 prior HER2-directed therapies for advanced BC T-DM1 3.6 mg/kg q3w IV 2 (n=400) 1 Treatment of physician’s choice (TPC)b Prior treatment with trastuzumab, lapatinib, and a taxane PD PD (n=200) T-DM1c (optional crossover) • Stratification factors: World region, number of prior regimens for advanced BC,d presence of visceral disease • Co-primary endpoints: PFS by investigator and OS • Key secondary endpoints: ORR by investigator and safety a Advanced BC includes MBC and unresectable locally advanced/recurrent BC. could have been single-agent chemotherapy, hormonal therapy, or HER2-directed therapy, or a combination of a HER2-directed therapy with a chemotherapy, hormonal therapy, or other HER2-directed therapy. c First patient in: Sep 2011. Study amended Sep 2012 (following EMILIA 2nd interim OS results) to allow patients in the TPC arm to receive T-DM1 after documented PD. d Excluding single-agent hormonal therapy. BC, breast cancer; IV, intravenous; ORR, objective response rate; PD, progressive disease; q3w, every 3 weeks. b TPC TPC Treatment Category TPC treatment category Combination with HER2-directed agent, % Chemotherapyb + trastuzumab Lapatinib + trastuzumab TPC (n=184a) 83.2 68.5 10.3 T-containing Hormonal therapy + trastuzumab 1.6 Chemotherapyb + lapatinib 2.7 Single-agent chemotherapy,b % 80.4 16.8 a Includes patients who received study treatment. b The most common chemotherapy agents used were vinorelbine, gemcitabine, eribulin, paclitaxel, and docetaxel. Wildiers, et al. ESMO 2013 29 10/30/2013 PFS by Investigator Assessment TPC T-DM1 (n=198) (n=404) Median (months) 3.3 6.2 No. of events 129 219 Stratified HR=0.528 (95% CI, 0.422, 0.661) P<0.0001 Proportion progression-free 1.0 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 Time (months) No. at risk: TPC 198 120 62 28 13 6 1 0 T-DM1 334 241 114 66 27 12 0 404 2013 Median follow-up: TPC, 6.5 months; T-DM1, 7.2 months. Unstratified HR=0.521 (P<0.0001). 59 PFS for Patients Treated With Trastuzumab-Containing Regimens TPC (T-containing) (n=149) Median (months) 3.2 Proportion progression-free 1.0 T-DM1 (n=404) 6.2 No. of events 101 219 Stratified HR=0.558 (95% CI, 0.437, 0.711) P<0.0001 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 Time (months) No. at risk: TPC 149 99 50 20 12 5 1 0 T-DM1 334 241 114 66 27 12 0 404 2013 Unstratified HR=0.54 (P<0.0001). 60 30 10/30/2013 First Interim OS Analysis 1.0 Proportion surviving Observed 21% of targeted events 0.8 0.6 TPC T-DM1 (n=198) (n=404) Median (months) 14.9 NE No. of events 44 61 Stratified HR=0.552 (95% CI, 0.369, 0.826); P=0.0034 Efficacy stopping boundary HR<0.363 or P<0.0000013 0.4 0.2 0.0 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 Time (months) No. at risk: TPC 198 169 125 80 51 30 9 3 0 T-DM1 381 316 207 127 65 30 7 0 404 2013 44 patients in the TPC arm received crossover T-DM1 treatment after documented progression. Unstratified HR=0.57 (P=0.004). 61 ORR in Patients With Measurable Disease By Investigator Assessment Difference: 22.7% (95% CI, 16.2, 29.2) P<0.0001 Patients, % 31.3% 8.6% 14/163 108/345 TPC T-DM1 2013 62 31 10/30/2013 Overview of AEs TPC (n=184a) T-DM1 (n=403a) 88.6 93.5 Grade ≥3 AEs, % 43.5 32.3 AEs leading to treatment c discontinuation, % 10.9 6.7 AEs leading to dose reduction, % 19.6 9.4 1.1 1.5 All-grade AEs, % b LVEF <50% and ≥15% decrease from baseline,d % a One patient randomized to the TPC arm received 2 cycles of T-DM1 by mistake; this patient was included in the T-DM1 group for safety analyses. Grade 5 AEs: TPC, 1.6% (n=3); T-DM1, 1.2% (n=5). Three were considered related to T-DM1: hepatic encephalopathy, subarachnoid hemorrhage, and pneumonitis. One was considered related to TPC: noncardiogenic pulmonary edema. c For any study drug. d No patient experienced an LVEF <40%. LVEF, left ventricular ejection fraction. b Wildiers, et al. ESMO 2013 Grade ≥3 AEs With Incidence ≥2% in Either Arm TPC (n=184) Nonhematologic AEs, % Diarrhea Abdominal pain AST increased Fatigue Asthenia Cellulitis Pulmonary embolism Dyspnea Hematologic AEs, % Neutropenia Febrile neutropenia Anemia Leukopenia Thrombocytopenia T-DM1 (n=403) Any grade Grade ≥3 Any grade Grade ≥3 21.7 12.5 5.4 25.0 15.8 3.3 2.2 9.2 4.3 2.7 2.2 2.2 2.2 2.2 2.2 1.6 9.9 6.5 8.4 27.0 15.6 1.2 0.5 9.9 0.7 1.2 2.2 2.0 1.0 0.5 0.5 2.0 21.7 3.8 10.3 6.0 3.3 15.8 3.8 2.7 2.7 1.6 5.5 0.2 8.9 0.7 15.1 2.5 0.2 2.7 0.2 4.7b Wildiers, et al. ESMO 2013 32 10/30/2013 HER2+ MBC After Progression Under Investigation Trastuzumab Resistance Mechanisms IGF-1R Nutrients EGFR/HER2 Truncated HER2 PI3K PTEN LKB1 AMPK Increased signaling through IGF-1R Constitutive PI3K/AKT activation AKT Absent or low PTEN TSC1 TSC2 Elevated AKT or pAKT RHEB Cell growth and proliferation Angiogenesis mTOR Cell metabolism Receptor signaling Constitutive activation of downstream pathways AKT, protein kinase B; EGFR, epidermal growth factor receptor; IGF-1R, insulin-like growth factor-1 receptor; mTOR, mammalian target of rapamycin; PI3K, phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase; PTEN, phosphatase and tensin; TSC, tuberosis sclerosis complex. 1. Widakowich C, et al. Anticancer Agents Med Chem. 2008,8(5):488-496. 2. Johnston SR. Clin Cancer Res. 2005;11(2 suppl):889s-899s. 33 10/30/2013 Phase I / II Everolimus Experience Everolimus 10 mg qday and Trastuzumab 6 mg/kg q3wk Everolimus 10 mg qday, Paclitaxel 80 mg/m2 days 1, 8, and 15 q4wk + Trastuzumab 2 mg/kg qwk N (%) N = 47 Best Response Complete response (CR) - Complete response (CR) - Partial response (PR) 7 (15%) Partial response (PR) 9 (19%) Stable disease ≥ 24 weeks (SD) 9 (19%) Stable disease (SD) 30 (62%) Overall response rate 7 (15%) Overall response rate 9 (19%) Clinical benefit rate 16 (34%) Clinical benefit rate 19 (40%) Median PFS 4.1 months Progressive disease 9 (19%) Most frequent grade 3 / 4 adverse events (> 10%) Lymphopenia, hyperglycemia, mucositis Most frequent grade 3 / 4 adverse events (> 10%) Neutropenia, lymphopenia, stomatitis Best Response Morrow PK, et al. J Clin Oncol. 2011;29(23):3126-3123. N (%) N = 48 Dalenc F, et al. J Clin Oncol. 2010;28(7S). Abstract 1013. BOLERO-3: EVE Phase III Trial Design (HER2+ ABC Pretreated) Key endpoints • Primary: PFS • Secondary: OS, ORR, CBR, safety, PK, biomarker/ laboratory assessments; patient reported outcomes EVE + Vinorelbine + TRAS BOLERO-3 N = 572 •HER2+ ABC •Prior taxane and progression on TRAS •ECOG PS ≤2 • Stratified by prior lapatinib use R 1:1 (E: 5 mg/d) (V: 25 mg/m2 weekly, days 1, 8, 15) (T: 2 mg/kg, days 1, 8, 15) 21 day cycle Vinorelbine + TRAS (V: 25 mg/m2 weekly, days 1, 8, 15) (T: 2 mg/kg, days 1, 8, 15) 21 day cycle US National Institutes of Health. Available at: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01007942. Accessed April 1, 2013. 34 10/30/2013 BOLERO-3: Previous Therapy Characteristic, % Previous lines of chemotherapy in metastatic setting 0 1 line 2 lines 3 lines Prior therapy Trastuzumab Taxane Lapatinib Hormonal therapy Everolimus + Trastuzumab + Vinorelbine N = 284 Placebo + Trastuzumab + Vinorelbine N = 285 16 41 34 9 16 43 29 12 100 100 27 43 100 100 27 40 2013 ASCO Annual Meeting. Oral Abstract 505. Presented by: Ruth M. O’Regan, MD. 69 BOLERO-3: Primary Endpoint Progression-Free Survival by Local Assessment 100 Hazard ratio = 0.78; 95% CI [0.65, 0.95] Log-rank P value: 0.0067 Median PFS Everolimus: 7.00 months Placebo: 5.78 months Probability (%) 80 60 Censoring times 40 Everolimus (n/N = 196/284) Placebo (n/N = 219/285) 20 0 0 6 12 18 24 30 36 42 48 54 60 66 72 78 84 90 96 102 108 114 120 126 132 138 144 150 156 162 168 174 No. of Patients Still at Risk Everolimus 284 259 233 200 161 126 98 78 Placebo 285 253 202 177 138 109 85 64 Time (weeks) 54 49 40 35 38 26 26 23 18 14 19 16 14 12 9 10 5 7 4 4 2 3 2 3 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 CI = confidence interval. 2013 ASCO Annual Meeting. Oral Abstract 505. Presented by: Ruth M. O’Regan, MD. 35 10/30/2013 Summary: HER2+ MBC • 1st Line: Pertuzumab/trastuzumab/taxane • 2nd/3rd line: T-DM1 • Other options after progression: – Trastuzumab/lapatinib – Lapatinib/capecitabine – Trastuzumab/other chemo – Trastuzumab or Lapatinib + AI – ??everolimus-based therapy Management of HER2 normal MBC Hormone receptor positive metastatic breast cancer 1st line therapy: Endocrine therapy almost always Treatment beyond 1st line Mechanisms of resistance MTOR inhibition (BOLERO-2) CDK4/6 inhibition Triple negative MBC: Area of unmet need Chemotherapy PARP inhibition? 36 10/30/2013 Hormone Receptor‐Positive (HR+) Breast Cancer Approximately 60% to 75% of invasive breast cancers are classified as HR+1,2 About 20% are HER2+ About 50% of HER2+ tumors are also ER+ ER signaling leads to Cell proliferation Time available for DNA repair Risk of mutation Abbreviations: ER, estrogen receptor; HER2, human epidermal growth factor receptor 2; HR, hormone receptor. 1. Cleator SJ, et al. Clin Breast Cancer. 2009;suppl 1:S6‐S17; 2. Milani M, et al. Clin Med Ther. 2009;1:141‐156. 73 Hormone Receptor‐Positive (HR+) Breast Cancer HR+ breast cancers are generally slower growing and have a better prognosis than HR– cancers1 Staining of ER+ breast cancer nuclei by immunohistochemistry (IHC)3 Mostly true for Luminal A cancers Also may be associated with increased proliferation (Luminal B cancers) ER expression correlates with improved response to endocrine therapy1 Multiple mechanisms within the ER pathway allow development of resistance to endocrine therapy2 A. Strong nuclear staining indicating widespread expression of ER (Allred score = 8) B. Weak nuclear staining indicating low to moderate expression of ER (Allred score = 4) Abbreviations: ER, estrogen receptor; HER2, human epidermal growth factor receptor 2; HR, hormone receptor. 1. Cleator SJ, et al. Clin Breast Cancer. 2009;suppl 1:S6‐S17; 2. Arpino G, et al. Endocr Rev. 2008;29(2):217‐233; 3. www.breastpathology.info. Accessed September 14, 2011. Images reprinted from NHS Trust, Edinburgh, UK. (www.breastpathology.info) 74 37 10/30/2013 Historical Timeline of Therapies for HR+ Advanced Breast Cancer Others1 Chemo‐ therapy Endocrine Therapy Anthracyclines1 Taxanes1 • Doxorubicin • Epirubicin • Paclitaxel • Docetaxel 1980s 1990s 1977 1896 Oopho‐ rectomy2,3 1990s • Capecitabine • Gemcitabine • Ixabepilone • Eribulin • Nab‐paclitaxel 2000s 2010 2002 SERMs4 AIs4 ERDs5 ERDs5 • Tamoxifen • Toremifene • Anastrozole • Letrozole • Exemestane • Fulvestrant • High‐dose Fulvestrant* 2012 Targeting mechanisms of endocrine resistance Abbreviations: AI, aromatase inhibitor; ERDs, estrogen receptor downregulator; HR+; hormone receptor positive; SERMs, selective estrogen receptor modulators. * Marginal improvement over lower dose fulvestrant. 1. http://www.advancedbreastcancercommunity.org/treatment/drugs.htm; 2. Beatson CT. Lancet. 1896;2:104‐107; 3. Beatson CT. Lancet. 1896;2:162‐165; 4. Cohen MH, et al. Oncologist. 2001;6:4‐11; 5. Faslodex [package insert]. Wilmington, DE: AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals LP; 2011. 75 EGFR HER2 Endocrine Therapy for HR+ Advanced Breast Cancer Estrogen Growth factor receptor Aromatase inhibitors (AIs) • Nonsteroidal AIs − Anastrozole − Letrozole • Steroidal AIs − Exemestane GRB2 SOS Shc RAS Cytoplasm RAF PI3K MEK Estrogen receptor Akt/ m-TOR MAPK Estrogen receptor downregulator (ERD) • Fulvestrant P Nucleus Cofactor complex LBD LBD P P AF1 AF1 Oophorecto my DBD DBD Cell growth Selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs) • Tamoxifen • Toremifene Adapted from Yardley DA, et al. J Clin Oncol. 2011;29(suppl 27). Abstract 268. 38 10/30/2013 Endocrine Therapy: Treatment Guidelines for HR+ Advanced Breast Cancer ABC1 treatment guidelines for advanced breast cancer1,2: Endocrine therapy (ET) is the preferred option for hormone receptor positive disease, even in the presence of visceral disease, unless there is concern or proof of endocrine resistance or rapidly progressive disease needing a fast response NCCN treatment guidelines for advanced breast cancer3: Prior ET within 1 year Systemic disease No prior ET within 1 year Premenopausal Ovarian ablation + ET Postmenopausal Up to 3 consecutive ET regimens Visceral crisisa Consider initial chemotherapy Premenopausal Ovarian ablation + ET or anti‐estrogen Postmenopausal Aromatase inhibitor (AI) or anti‐estrogen Visceral crisisa Consider initial chemotherapy Abbreviations: AI, aromatase inhibitor; ET, endocrine therapy. a Visceral crisis includes symptomatic visceral disease and/or a high burden of visceral disease. 1. Cardoso F, et al. Breast. 2012;21(3):242‐252; 2. Wilcken N, et al. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2003;2:CD002747; 3. National Comprehensive Cancer Network. NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology: Breast Cancer. V.3.2012. 77 Initial Endocrine Therapy for Postmenopausal Women With HR+ Advanced Breast Cancer Aromatase inhibitors have become the standard of care for initial treatment of postmenopausal women with HR+ advanced breast cancer Aromatase inhibitors have demonstrated improved efficacy compared with tamoxifen Fulvestrant has demonstrated similar efficacy compared with tamoxifen TTP (mo): anastrozole (10.7) vs tamoxifen (6.4)1 TTP (mo): letrozole (9.4) vs tamoxifen (6.0)2 PFS (mo): exemestane (9.9) vs tamoxifen (5.8)3 TTP (mo): fulvestrant (8.2) vs tamoxifen (8.3)4 Results from combination endocrine therapy trials for the initial treatment of treatment‐naive postmenopausal women with HR+ advanced breast cancer are inconclusive Results demonstrate marginal clinical benefit 1. Bonneterre J, et al. Cancer. 2001;92(9):2247-2258; 2. Mouridsen H, et al. J Clin Oncol. 2001;19(10):2596‐2606; 3. Paridaens RJ, et al. J Clin 78 Oncol. 2008;26(30):4883‐4890; 4. Howell A, et al. J Clin Oncol. 2004;22(9):1605‐1613. 39 10/30/2013 1st Line Hormone Receptor Positive MBC UNDER INVESTIGATION 79 Abstract 292 Results of a Randomized Phase 2 Study of PD 0332991, a Cyclin-Dependent Kinase (CDK) 4/6 Inhibitor, in Combination with Letrozole vs Letrozole Alone for First-Line Treatment of + ER , HER2– Advanced Breast Cancer (TRIO-18) RS Finn,1 JP Crown,2 K Boer,3 I Lang,4 RJ Parikh,5 A Breazna,6 SN Ho,7 ST Kim,7 S Randolph,7 DJ Slamon1 1University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, USA; 2Irish Cooperative Oncology Research Group, Dublin, Ireland; 3Szent Margit Korhaz, Onkologia, Budapest, Hungary; 4Orszagos Onkologiai Intezet, Budapest, Hungary; 5Comprehensive Cancer Centers of Nevada, Henderson, NV, USA; 6Pfizer Oncology, New York, NY, USA; 7Pfizer Oncology, La Jolla, CA, USA Presented at: IMPAKT Breast Cancer Conference; 3-5 May 2012; Brussels, Belgium. 40 10/30/2013 Rb as Master-Regulator of the R-point Target of PD 0332991 p16INK4a Inactivates Rb and allows progression Reprinted from Weinberg RA. The Biology of Cancer. New York, NY: Garland Science; 2006. © 2006 Garland Science. 81 PD 0332991 Preferentially Inhibits Proliferation of Luminal Estrogen Receptor-Positive Human Breast Cancer Cell Lines In Vitro 1000 900 800 IC 50 (nM) 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 M BZR 17 5 75 C A -3 0 M A M -1 B H C 13 4 C UA 2 C C 02 -8 EF 9 3 SU M 1 M 9 EF 19 M 0 1 M 9 2A B H C -36 C1 1 H C 50 C1 0 4 H C 19 C M 38 BM 41 C 5 U A F -1 C C 0A H C -81 C2 2 2 Z 1 M R7 8 D A 5M 1 B4 1 8 53 4A 1 T4 7D M CF M BT 7 D A -2 M 0 B4 B T 35 4 SK 74 BR K 3 H C P LM C1 1 D A 14 M 3 H C B 23 C 1 SU 1 39 M 5 H S 22 5 57 8 18 T U A 4B CC 5 7 CA 32 LB 51 C O T5 4 LO 9 D U 82 4 H C 4 47 C 5 H C 1 18 C 7 H C 1 56 C 9 H C 1 80 C 6 H C 1 93 C1 7 9 H C 54 C M 70 B43 M 6 M B D A 15 M 7 B4 68 0 Subtype Luminal HER2 Amplified Immortalized Non-luminal/post EMT Non-luminal Reprinted from Finn RS, et al. Breast Cancer Res. 2009;11(5):R77. 82 41 10/30/2013 Study Design: Phase 2 Part 1 Exploratory study evaluating safety and efficacy of the combination in patients selected based on hormone receptor status only R A N D O M I Z A T I O N Study population • Postmenopausal women with ER+ HER2– breast cancer N = 60 (actual 66) PD 0332991 125 mg QD x 3 weeks, 1 week off; plus letrozole 2.5 mg QD x 4 weeks 1:1 Letrozole 2.5 mg QD x 4 weeks 4-week treatment cycle Stratification Factors • Disease site (visceral vs bone only vs other) • Disease-free interval (>12 vs ≤12 mo from end of adjuvant to recurrence or de novo advanced disease) Best Overall Response (ITT) PD 991 + LET (n = 84) LET (n = 81) 84 81 Objective Response Rate, % (95% CI) Complete Response, n (%) Partial Response, n (%) 34 (24, 46) 0 29 (34) 26 (17, 37) 1 (1) 20 (25) Patients with measurable disease, n (%) 64 (76) 65 (80) Objective Response Rate, % (95% CI) Complete Response, n (%) Partial Response, n (%) 45 (33, 58) 0 29 (45) 31 (20, 43) 0 20 (31) Stable Disease ≥24 weeks, n (%) 30 (36) 15 (18) Clinical Benefit Rate, % (n)* 70 (59) 44(36 ) Stable Disease <24 weeks, n (%) 14 (17) 22 (27) Progressive Disease, n (%) 3 (4) 17 (21) Indeterminate, n (%) 8 (10) 6 (7) All randomized patients, n * Complete response + partial response + stable disease ≥24 weeks. 42 10/30/2013 Progression-Free Survival Probability Progression-Free Survival 1.0 Number of Events (%) 0.9 Median PFS, months (95% CI) 0.8 0.7 PD 991 + LET (n = 84) LET (n = 81) 21 (25) 40 (49) 26.1 (12.7, 26.1) 7.5 (5.6, 12.6) Hazard Ratio (95% CI) 0.6 0.37 (0.21, 0.63) P value <0.001 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 0 2 4 6 8 10 60 38 53 29 43 22 35 17 Number of patients at risk PD991+LET LET 84 81 75 57 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 26 25 11 18 6 15 5 14 4 9 3 5 3 3 1 1 1 Time (Month) 28 Most Common Treatment-Related AEs ≥10% (AT) PD 991 + LET (n = 83) LET (n = 77) Grade 1/2 Grade 3 Grade 4 Grade 1/2 Grade 3 Grade 4 Neutropenia 19 46 5 1 1 0 Leukopenia 24 14 0 0 0 0 Anemia 19 4 1 0 0 0 Fatigue 17 2 0 13 0 0 Alopecia 18 0 0 3 0 0 Hot flush 17 0 0 10 0 0 Arthralgia 16 0 0 10 0 0 Nausea 12 2 0 1 0 0 Thrombocytopenia 11 1 0 0 0 0 43 10/30/2013 Phase 3 trial of PD-0332991 (Palbociclib) Next Steps for CDK 4/6 Inhibition Primary endpoint PFS Secondary endpoints OS Response Response duration Disease control Safety PK/PD Biomarkers QoL Finn RS. ASCO 2013. Abstract 652. Patients with Disease Progression on One Hormone Therapy May Respond to Another Hormone Therapy 40% 30% 25% 15% 1st Line 2nd Line 3rd Line 4th Line R E S I S T A N C E Bavior C, et al. Ann Oncol 2012. Epub Feb 8; Osborne Ck, Schiff R. Ann Res Med 2011;62:233-247 44 10/30/2013 Endocrine Resistance in HR+ Advanced Breast Cancer Definition of endocrine resistance in advanced breast cancer is evolving Primary resistance: PD within 6 months of starting treatment1 Secondary resistance: Initial response with relapse 6 months or later1 Approximately 50% of patients with HR+ advanced breast cancer do not respond to initial endocrine therapy2 The majority of patients with HR+ advanced breast cancer will ultimately progress despite endocrine therapy Abbreviations: HR, hormone receptor; PD, progressive disease. 1. Bachelot T, et al. J Clin Oncol. 2012;30(22):2718-2724; 2. Bedard PL, et al. Breast Cancer Res Treat. 2008;108(3):307-317. Treatment Guidelines for HR+ Advanced Breast Cancer Following Progression on Initial Endocrine Therapy NCCN treatment guidelines1: • Hormone receptor positive advanced breast cancer may benefit from sequential use of ET at time of progression and should receive additional ET for second-line and subsequent therapy2 Continue endocrine therapy until progression or unacceptable toxicity Progression No clinical benefit after 3 consecutive endocrine therapy regimens Or Symptomatic visceral disease Yes Chemotherapy No Trial of new endocrine therapy • Approaches to switching endocrine therapy3 Tamoxifen or AI ERD Tamoxifen AI Other endocrine approaches Nonsteroidal AI steroidal AI Abbreviations: AI, aromatase inhibitor; ET, endocrine therapy; ERD, estrogen receptor downregulator. 1. National Comprehensive Cancer Network. NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology: Breast Cancer. V.3.2012; 2. Wilcken N, et al. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2003;2:CD002747; 3. Hurvitz SA, et al. Cancer. 2008;113(9):2385‐2397. 90 45 10/30/2013 Fulvestrant Is Similar to Anastrozole in Postmenopausal Women With HR+ Advanced Breast Cancer Following Prior Endocrine Therapy 2 phase 3 studies; N = 851 Postmenopausal women with HR+ advanced breast cancer Progressed after endocrine therapy in adjuvant or first‐line metastatic setting (~45% endocrine therapy‐naive in advanced setting) Primary endpoint TTP Fulvestrant 250 mg/mo Secondary endpoints ORR, DOR, TTF, TTD, CBR, DoCB Anastrozole 1 mg/d Fulvestrant (n = 428) Median follow‐up, all (mo) Anastrozole (n = 423) P value 15.1 TTP (mo) 5.5 4.1 ORR (%) 19.2 16.5 .31 CBR (%) 43.5 40.9 .51 Median follow‐up for DOR (mo) .48 22.1 DOR, responders (mo) 16.7 Ratio of average DORs (fulvestrant:anastrozole) 13.7 1.30 — < .01 Abbreviations: CBR, clinical benefit rate; DoCB, duration of clinical benefit; DOR, duration of response; HR, hormone receptor; ORR, objective response rate; PgR, progesterone receptor; TTD, time to death; TTF, time to failure; TTP, time to progression. Robertson JFR, et al. Cancer. 2003;98(2):229-238. 91 EFECT: Fulvestrant Is Similar to Exemestane in Postmenopausal Women With HR+ Advanced Breast Cancer Following Prior Nonsteroidal Aromatase Inhibitor Therapy Phase 3 study; N = 693 Postmenopausal women with HR+ advanced breast cancer Progressed after nonsteroidal AI in adjuvant or first‐line metastatic setting (~15% endocrine therapy‐naive in advanced setting) Fulvestrant 500 mg d 1 250 mg day 14, 28, mo Secondary endpoints ORR, CBR, DOR, DoCB, OS Exemestane 25 mg/d Fulvestrant (n = 351) Median follow‐up, all (mo) TTP (mo) ORR (%) CBR (%) DoCB (mo) DOR (mo) Primary endpoint TTP Exemestane (n = 342) P value 3.7 6.7 31.5 8.3 5.5 .653 .736 .853 — — 13.0 3.7 7.4 32.2 9.3 7.5 Abbreviations: AI, aromatase inhibitor; CBR, clinical benefit rate; DoCB, duration of clinical benefit; DOR, duration of response; HR, hormone receptor; ORR, objective response rate; OS, overall survival; TTP, time to progression. Chia S, et al. J Clin Oncol. 2008;26(10):1664-1670. 92 46 10/30/2013 CONFIRM: Fulvestrant 500 mg Is Slightly Better Than 250 mg in Postmenopausal Women With ER+ Advanced Breast Cancer Following Prior Endocrine Therapy Phase 3 study; N = 736 Postmenopausal women with ER+ advanced breast cancer Fulvestrant 500 mg/mo Progressed after endocrine therapy in adjuvant or first‐ line metastatic setting (~45% were endocrine therapy‐ naive in advanced setting) Fulvestrant 250 mg/mo Fulvestrant 500 (n = 362) 6.5 9.1 45.6 16.6 25.1 PFS (mo) ORR (%) CBR (%) DoCB (mo) TTD (mo) Primary endpoint PFS Secondary endpoints ORR, CBR, DoCR, OS, TTD, QoL Fulvestrant 250 (n = 374) 5.5 10.2 39.6 13.9 22.8 P value .006 .795 .100 — .091 Abbreviations: CBR, clinical benefit rate; DoCB, duration of clinical benefit; ER, estrogen receptor; ORR, objective response rate; OS, overall survival; PFS, progression‐free survival; TTD, time to death; QoL, quality of life. Di Leo A, et al. J Clin Oncol. 2010;28(30):4594-4600. 93 SoFEA: Fulvestrant + Anastrozole Is Similar to Fulvestrant or Exemestane Alone in Postmenopausal Women With HR+ Advanced Breast Cancer Following Prior Nonsteroidal Aromatase Inhibitor Therapy Phase 3 study; N = 750 Postmenopausal women with HR+ advanced breast cancer Progressed after nonsteroidal AI therapy in adjuvant or first‐line metastatic setting PFS (mo) OS (mo) ORR (%) Fulvestrant + Anastrozole (n = 250) 4.4 20.2 7.4 Fulvestrant 250 mg/mo + Anastrozole 1 mg/d Fulvestrant 250 mg/mo Primary endpoint PFS Secondary endpoints OS, ORR, safety Exemestane 25 mg/d Fulvestrant (n = 250) 4.8 19.4 6.9 Exemestane (n = 250) 3.4 21.6 3.6 P valuea .98 .61 .82 P valueb .56 .68 .10 Abbreviations: AI, aromatase inhibitor; HR, hormone receptor; ORR, objective response rate; OS, overall survival; PFS, progression-free survival. a Fulvestrant + anastrozole versus fulvestrant alone. b Fulvestrant alone versus exemestane alone. Johnston S, et al. EBCC 2012. Abstract LBA2. 94 47 10/30/2013 Mechanisms of Endocrine Resistance IGF1R MoAb P AB P P P MoAb P TKI PI3-K P SOS TKI RAS RAF MEK Akt CCI RAD p90RSK MAPK SERD AI ER T Increased upstream signaling through EGFR and/or IGF-IR and or VEGFR EGFR/HER2 TKI VEGFR Increased signaling through PI3-K pathway E2 Cytoplasm PP P P ERER p160 CBP ERE Basal Transcription Machinery ER Target Gene Transcription Nucleus Plasma Membrane Cell Growth Mechanisms of intrinsic and acquired resistance likely similar From Johnston CCR 2005 BOLERO-2: Everolimus in Postmenopausal, Hormone Receptor Positive ABC N = 724 Postmenopausal ER+ HER2breast cancer pts refractory to letrozole or anastrozole Everolimus 10 mg/day + Exemestane 25 mg/day (N = 485) Placebo + Exemestane 25 mg/day (N = 239) Primary PFS Secondary OS ORR Bone Markers Safety PK Stratification: 1. Sensitivity to prior hormonal therapy 2. Presence of visceral disease No cross-over Baselga J, et al. N Engl J Med 2012;366(6):520-9. 48 10/30/2013 BOLERO-2: Baseline Characteristics Everolimus + Exemestane Placebo + Exemestane (N = 485), % (N = 239), % 62 (34, 93) 61 (28, 90) Caucasian 74 78 Asian 20 19 Performance status 0 60 59 Liver involvement 33 30 Lung involvement 29 33 Measurable disease* 70 68 Characteristic Median age (range), years Race *All other patients had ≥ 1 bone lesion. Baselga J, et al. N Engl J Med 2012;366(6):520-9. BOLERO-2: Prior Therapy Everolimus + Exemestane Placebo + Exemestane (N = 485), % (N = 239), % Sensitivity to prior hormonal therapy 84 84 Last treatment: LET/ ANA 74 75 Adjuvant 21 16 Metastatic 79 84 Prior tamoxifen 47 49 Prior fulvestrant 17 16 Prior chemotherapy for metastatic BC 26 24 Number of prior therapies: ≥ 3 54 53 Therapy Last treatment Baselga J, et al. N Engl J Med 2012;366(6):520-9. 49 10/30/2013 BOLERO-2 Primary Endpoint: PFS Central Assessment Probability of Event (%) 100 HR = 0.36 (95% CI: 0.27-0.47) Log rank P value = 3.3 x 10 -15 80 EVE + EXE: 10.6 Months PBO + EXE: 4.1 Months 60 40 20 Everolimus + Exemestane (E/N=114 / 485) Placebo + Exemestane (E/N=104 / 239) 0 0 6 12 18 24 30 36 42 48 54 60 66 72 78 Time (weeks) Everolimus plus exemestane increased progression-free survival by 64% Baselga J, et al. N Engl J Med 2012;366(6):520-9. BOLERO 2: PFS Subgroup Analyses Favors EVE + EXE Subgroups (N) Favors PBO + EXE All (724) Age <65 (449) ≥65 (275) Region Asia (137) Europe (275) North America (274) Other (38) Sensitivity to prior hormonal therapy Yes (610) No (114) Visceral metastasis Yes (406) No (318) Last therapy Aromatase inhibitor (532) Antiestrogen (122) Other (70) Last therapy setting Metastatic (586) Adjuvant (138) Prior chemotherapy Adjuvant only (306) Metastatic (186) None (232) 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Hazard Ratio Presented by J. Baselga at the 2011 European Multidisciplinary Cancer Congress (ECCO/ESMO), September 26, 2011. Abstract: 9LBA. 50 10/30/2013 BOLERO-2: Overall Response Rate and Clinical Benefit Rate by Local Assessment 40 35 Everolimus + Exemestane 33.4% Placebo + Exemestane 30 P < 0.0001 25 18.0% 20 P < 0.0001 15 10 9.5% 5 0.4% 0 Response Clinical Benefit Baselga J, et al. N Engl J Med 2012;366(6):520-9. BOLERO-2: Most Common G3/4 AEs Everolimus + Exemestane (N = 482), % Placebo + Exemestane (N = 238), % All Grades Grade 3 Grade 4 All Grades Grade 3 Grade 4 Stomatitis 56 8 0 11 1 0 Fatigue 33 3 <1 26 1 0 Dyspnea 18 4 0 9 1 <1 Anemia 16 5 <1 4 <1 <1 Hyperglycemia 13 4 <1 2 <1 0 AST 13 3 <1 6 1 0 Pneumonitis 12 3 0 0 0 0 AE: Adverse Event; AST: Aspartate aminotransferase Presented by J. Baselga at the 2011 European Multidisciplinary Cancer Congress (ECCO/ESMO), September 26, 2011. Abstract: 9LBA. 102 51 10/30/2013 Summary: HR+/HER2- MBC ● Endocrine therapy should be used until options exhausted – Exceptions: Rare case of symptomatic, severe, visceral metastases ● In post-menopausal women whose disease has progressed on non-steroidal AI, exemestane/everolimus is excellent option but toxicity needs to be anticipated and closely managed ● Exciting data re: CDK4/6i 103 Triple Negative Breast Cancer Area of Unmet Need 104 52 10/30/2013 Triple Negative vs. Basal-like Breast Cancer Triple negative – – – – Defined by IHC Lacks expression of ER, PR and Her2/neu 10-18% of all breast cancer Not synonymous with basal-like breast cancer (10-30% not basal-like) Basal-like Breast Cancer – Defined by gene expression profile – 14-26% of breast cancer – 15-40% ER+PR+ or Her2+ Parker et al. JCO 2009 Using IHC to define Basal type? Problem with using 3 IHC markers – How do you define ER and PR No positive cells? <1%? <10%? <20% – How reproducible/accurate is IHC testing? 20% false negative ER 12% false positive PR Up to 20% false positive Her2 53 10/30/2013 Features of TN breast cancer More aggressive – High grade – High relapse pattern (esp in first 5 years, low late risk) – Sites of relapse different from luminal type Tends to metastasize to organs and CNS – Responsive to chemotherapy TNBC pts with PCR to neoadjuvant chemo good outcome similar to non-TNBC Younger women African American BRCA1 mutations (80% have basal-like) BRCA pathway dysfunction P53 mutations common Liedtke, JCO 2008 and Lin, Cancer 2008 Outcome TNBC 54 10/30/2013 Rates of distant recurrences: TNBC vs Others Challenge Little data regarding molecular characteristics and associated signaling for TN/BL breast cancer Targeted therapy does not exist – Her2/neu+ breast cancer: trastuzumab, lapatinib – ER+ breast cancer: Tamoxifen, AIs, MTORi 55 10/30/2013 Modest Benefit of Single‐Agent Chemotherapy for Advanced Breast Cancer Treatment Line First‐line Second‐line Third‐line Subsequent lines Typical Clinical Outcomes Response Rate, % Median TTP, mo 25 – 45 5 – 8 15 – 30 2 – 5 0 – 20 1 – 4 Limited or no data Abbreviation: TTP, time to progression. Burstein HJ. ASCO 2010. Metastatic Breast Cancer Oral Abstract Session. Combination Versus Sequential Single‐Agent Chemotherapy ABC1 treatment guidelines1: Both combination and sequential single agent chemotherapy are reasonable options Based on available data, sequential monotherapy is the preferred choice for advanced breast cancer Combination chemotherapy should be reserved for patients with rapid clinical progression, life‐threatening visceral metastases, or need for rapid symptom and/or disease control Duration of each regimen and number of regimens should be tailored to each individual patient Usually each regimen should be given until progression of disease or unacceptable toxicity (unacceptable should be defined together with the patient) 1. Cardoso F, et al. Breast. 2012;21(3):242‐252. 56 10/30/2013 NCCN Guidelines Single Agent Chemotherapy Regimens for MBC Anthracyclines (doxorubicin, liposomal doxorubicin) Taxanes (paclitaxel, docetaxel, alb-bound paclitaxel) Anti-metabolites (capecitabine, gemcitabine) Other microtubule inhibitors (vinorelbine, eribulin Other: cisplatin, cyclophosphamide, epirubicin, ixabepilone NCCN Guidelines Combination Regimens Chemotherapy Regimens for MBC CAF, FAC, FEC, AC, EC CMF Docetaxel/capecitabine Gemcitabine/paclitaxel Gemcitabine/carboplatin Paclitaxel/bevacizumab (no longer FDA approved but still in NCCN v3.2013) 57 10/30/2013 Triple-Negative Breast Cancers: Some Potential Therapeutic Targets Cetuximab EGFR Tyrosine Kinase C-KIT tyrosine kinase MAP Kinase Pathway MAPK inhibitors; NOTCH inhibitors AntiAngiogenesis Dasatinib Sunitinib Akt Pathway Transcriptional Control Cell Cycle Bevacizumab Cell Death PARP inhibitors; Trabectedin DNA Repair pathways After Cleator S et al. Lancet Oncol. 2006:8:235-244 PARP inhibitors for Breast Cancer 58 10/30/2013 117 PARP as a Target • Key regulator of DNA damage repair – Involved in DNA baseexcision repair • Binds directly to DNA damage and produces large branched chains of poly(ADP-ribose) • It is differentially upregulated in primary breast cancers, including the ER-, PR-, and HER2negative subtype Amé JC, et al. Bio Essays. 2004;26:882-893. 118 Gemcitabine / Carboplatin +/- Iniparib in Triple Negative MBC (TNBC) MBC ER / PR / HER2 Negative ECOG of 0 or 1 ≤ 2 previous chemotherapies for MBC No prior gemcitabine, carboplatin, or PARP inhibitor Co-primary endpoints: Phase II: CBR, safety, and tolerability Phase III: PFS and OS R A N D O M I Z E Iniparib 5.6 mg/kg IV, Days 1, 4, 8, 11 + Gemcitabine 1000 mg/m2 + Carboplatin AUC = 2 Days 1 & 8 q3wk Gemcitabine 1000 mg/m2 + Carboplatin AUC = 2 Days 1 & 8 q3wk 1:1 N=123 O’ Shaughnessy J, et al. N Engl J Med. 2011;364(3):205-214; O’ Shaughnessy J, et al. J Clin Oncol. 2011;29. Abstract 1007. 59 10/30/2013 119 Phase II Trial: Gemcitabine / Carboplatin +/- Iniparib in TNBC Efficacy Toxicity Efficacy I+G/C N = 61 G/C N = 62 Selected Grade ≥ 3 Adverse Events I+G/C N = 57 G/C N = 59 CBR P = 0.01 56% 34% Fatigue or asthenia 7% 19% Diarrhea 2% 2% OS P = 0.01 12.3 months 7.7 months Leukopenia 12% 10% Neutropenia 67% 63% PFS P = 0.01 5.9 months 3.6 months Anemia 23% 15% Thrombocytopenia 37% 27% O’ Shaughnessy J, et al. N Engl J Med. 2011;364(3):205-214. 120 Phase III Study: Gemcitabine / Carboplatin +/- Iniparib in TNBC • Neither of the co-primary endpoints of the phase III trial were met 1.0 0.9 GC GCI (N = 258) (N = 261) 4.1 5.1 (3.1, 4.6) (4.2, 5.8) 0.79 (0.65, 0.98) 0.027 OS 0.9 0.8 GC GCI (N = 258) (N = 261) 11.1 11.8 (9.2, 12.1) (10.6, 12.9) 0.88 (0.69, 1.12) 0.28 Pre-specified alpha = 0.04 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 Median OS, mos (95% CI) HR (95% CI) P value 1.0 Pre-specified alpha = 0.01 Probability of Survival Probability of Progression-Free Survival PFS Median PFS, mos (95% CI) HR (95% CI) P value 0.1 0 No. at risk 258 GC 261 GCI 2 171 187 4 6 8 10 12 14 Months Since Study Entry 116 138 63 83 38 53 18 11 6 2 1 0 16 0 0 0 0 No. at risk GC 258 261 GCI 2 4 6 8 10 Months 239 248 214 230 181 151 204 169 99 111 12 14 16 38 52 11 15 0 0 O’ Shaughnessy J, et al. J Clin Oncol. 2011;29. Abstract 1007. 60 10/30/2013 Problems with Iniparib Study • • Drug: Does not work by inhibiting PARP Patient population: No central-review mandated to confirm that tumors were all triple negative Parp inhibitors still may work Being developed primarily in BRCA 1 & 2 mutated patients now Some drug companies in phase I/II development Abbott Clovis Biomarin Astra Zeneca Any role for triple negative? How to best define basal-like ca clinically? 61 10/30/2013 Germline BRCA Mutation – Breast Cancer BMN673 Phase I data Response Deleterious Mutation N BRCA 1 PR CR SD > 24 weeks SD<24 weeks/ PD 7 2 0 1 4 BRCA 2 11 5 1 4 1 Total 18 7 1 5 5 Overall RECIST response rate: 8/18 (44%); Clinical benefit response rate (CR,PR, SD > 24 weeks) = 13/18 (72%) At the 1 mg/day Phase 3 dose, 7/14 (50%) and 12/14 (86%) had objective and clinical benefit responses, respectively European Cancer Congress 2013 – Abstract 29LBA Germline BRCA Mutation – Breast Cancer RECIST waterfall plot 20 % Change in Target Lesions 0 * -20 * * -40 * -60 -80 -100 Median duration of response: 27.9 weeks 95% C.I.: 19.9‐40.3 weeks Median progression‐free survival: 33.1 weeks 95% C.I. 13.1‐40.4 weeks Dose (g/day) 900 1000 1100 BRCA 1 BRCA 2 * Treatment ongoing * * * * * 12 4 62 10/30/2013 Conclusions HER2+ Multiple promising therapies (Pertuzumab, trastuzumab, lapatinib, T-DM1, everolimus) HER2 negative/Hormone receptor positive breast cancer: Many therapies available, resistance still remains Endocrine therapy MTOR inhibition validated On the horizon: CDK inhibitors Chemo after exhausting endocrine options Triple negative breast cancer Chemo, clinical trials (PARPi?) Questions & Discussion 63