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Breast Cancer Highlights From San Antonio Joyce O'Shaughnessy, MD Kimberly Blackwell, MD Hope Rugo, MD Reminder: feedback is appreciated. You will be prompted at the end for your feedback. Updates on Chemotherapy and Other Novel Agents Joyce O'Shaughnessy, MD Adjuvant Chemotherapy CALOR: Adjuvant Chemotherapy for Isolated Local or Regional Recurrence • Rationale: – Isolated local or regional recurrence (ILRR) of breast cancer has a poor prognosis – No randomized studies of adjuvant chemotherapy for ILRR have been published in the last 30 years – Objective: Evaluate the effect of adjuvant chemotherapy on patients with ILRR • CALOR study design: Eligibility criteria: • First ILRR • Complete gross excision of recurrence • No evidence of positive supraclavicular LNs • No evidence of distant metastasis Primary endpoint: DFS Secondary endpoint: OS (N=162) R A N D O M I Z E + Endocrine therapy for HR-positive disease Adjuvant chemotherapy + HER2-directed therapy (optional) No chemotherapy + Radiation therapy (mandatory for those with positive margins) – Chemotherapy chosen by investigators – Recommendation: at least 2 drugs, 3-6 months of therapy Aebi et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S3-2 CALOR: Adjuvant Chemotherapy for Isolated Local or Regional Recurrence • Sample size: – Original target was 977 patients and HR = 0.74 – Amended in 2008; target was 265 patients and HR = 0.60 – Actual enrollment: 162 patients • Results: Chemotherapy* (n=85) No chemotherapy* (n=77) Total failures 24 34 Local/regional 6 (25%) 9 (26%) Distant Soft tissue Bone Viscera 15 (63%) 0 8 7 22 (65%) 2 5 15 Contralateral breast 1 (4%) 1 (3%) Secondary non-breast malignancy 1 (4%) 0 Deaths without failure 1 (4%) 2 (6%) Site of first failure (after ILRR) * 42% of patients in the chemotherapy arm and 32% in the no-chemotherapy arm had not received previous chemotherapy. The median time from primary surgery to ILRR was 5 and 6 years, respectively. Aebi et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S3-2 CALOR: Adjuvant Chemotherapy for Isolated Local or Regional Recurrence • Efficacy results: Chemotherapy No chemotherapy HR (95% CI) P-value 5-yr DFS ER-positive ER-negative 69% 70% 67% 57% 69% 35% 0.59 (0.35-0.99) 0.94 (0.47-1.89) 0.32 (0.14-0.73) .046 .87 .007 5-yr OS ER-positive ER-negative 88% 94% 79% 76% 80% 69% 0.41 (0.19-0.89) 0.40 (0.12-1.28) 0.43 (0.15-1.24) .02 .12 .12 Survival – Multivariate analysis showed treatment (chemo/no chemo) to have significant impact on both DFS (HR = 0.50; P = .01) and OS (HR = 0.37; P = .02) Aebi et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S3-2 UK TACT2: Comparison of Standard vs Accelerated Epirubicin in Early Breast Cancer • The objective was to test the following 2 hypotheses: – Acceleration of anthracycline chemotherapy offers improved efficacy (these results presented here) – Capecitabine has similar efficacy but less toxicity compared with CMF • UK TACT2 Phase III trial with 2x2 factorial study design: RANDOMIZATION (N=4391) Standard epirubicin (E) 100 mg/m2, Accelerated epirubicin (aE) 100 mg/m2, q2w, for 4 cycles Pegfilgrastim 6 mg on day 2 followed by: q3w, for 4 cycles followed by: CMF Capecitabine (X) mg/m2 600/40/600 IV bolus, days 1 & 8 or 100/40/600 mg/m2 PO, days 114, for 4 cycles mg/m2 2500 bid, days 1-14, for 4 cycles CMF Capecitabine (X) mg/m2 600/40/600 IV bolus, days 1 & 8 or 100/40/600 mg/m2 PO, days 114, for 4 cycles 2500 mg/m2 bid, days 1-14, for 4 cycles Primary endpoint: TTR (time to tumor recurrence) Secondary endpoints: DFS, OS, toxicity, QOL Cameron et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S3-3 UK TACT2: Comparison of Standard vs Accelerated Epirubicin in Early Breast Cancer • Safety results: Standard E Accelerated E (n=2221) (n=2170) 0% 0.9% Leukopenia 3.8% 1.0% Neutropenia 16.4% 1.7% Febrile neutropenia 3.6% 1.4% Grade 3/4 AEs Hand-foot syndrome • Efficacy results: Outcome Standard E Accelerated E HR (95% CI) P-value 3-year TTR 90.9% 91.0% 5-year TTR 85.2% 86.4% 0.96 (0.81-1.13) .60 3-year OS 95.4% 94.4% 5-year OS 89.3% 88.6% 1.13 (0.93-1.37) .23 – There were 167 breast cancer deaths in the E arm and 179 in the aE arm Cameron et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S3-3 10-Year Follow Up of Intense Dose-Dense Chemotherapy vs. Conventional Chemotherapy in High-Risk Patients with ≥4 Positive LNs • Rationale: There are no published reports of long-term survival and toxicity data with dose-dense regimens • Objective: Confirm the Norton-Simon hypothesis of dose density and evaluate the safety of epoetin alfa as primary prophylaxis • Study design: (N=1284) R A N D O M I Z E epirubicin 150 q2w x 3 mg/m2 paclitaxel 225 q2w x 3 mg/m2 cyclophosphamide 2500 mg/m2 q2w x 3 + tamoxifen G-CSF ± epoetin alfa + tamoxifen EC 90/600 mg/m2 paclitaxel 175 mg/m2 q3w x 4 q3w x 4 Primary endpoint: RFS Moebus et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S3-4 Secondary endpoint: OS, QOL, toxicity 10-Year Follow Up of Intense Dose-Dense Chemotherapy vs. Conventional Chemotherapy in High-Risk Patients with ≥4 Positive LNs • Efficacy results: Outcome IDD-ETC EC→T HR (95% CI) P-value 10-yr RFS 56% 47% 0.74 (0.63-0.87) .00014 10-yr OS 4-9 positive LNs 10+ positive LNs 69% 74% 62% 59% 66% 48% 0.72 (0.60-0.87) 0.77 (0.59-1.01) 0.66 (0.51-0.86) .0007 .06 .0016 – No therapy-related death or long-term toxicity was observed with iddETC • Transfusion results: IDD-ETC (n=324) IDD-ETC + EPO (n=319) P-value -- -- < .001 (favoring +EPO arm) Need for ≥1 transfusion 28% 13% < .0001 Patients with venous thrombotic event 7% 13% .029 Transfusion-related outcomes Median hemoglobin (g/dL) – Negative impacts of epoetin alfa on RFS and OS were not observed Moebus et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S3-4 BEATRICE: Phase III Trial of Adjuvant Bevacizumab in Triple-Negative Breast Cancer • BEATRICE study design (N=2591) Eligibility criteria: • Resected triple-negative (centrally confirmed) invasive early breast cancer Primary endpoint: DFS Secondary endpoints: OS, breast cancer-free interval, DFS, distant DFS, safety, biomarkers R A N D O M I Z E 4-8 cycles of standard chemotherapy (investigator’s choice) 4-8 cycles of standard chemotherapy (investigator’s choice) + bevacizumab 5 mg/kg/wk equivalent for 1 year duration Chemotherapy options: • Taxane-based (≥4 cycles) • Anthracycline-based (≥4 cycles) • Anthracycline + taxane (3-4 cycles each) Cameron et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S6-5 BEATRICE: Phase III Trial of Adjuvant Bevacizumab in Triple-Negative Breast Cancer • Efficacy results Outcome 3-yr invasive DFS OS – • Chemo alone (n=1290) Chemo + bevacizumab (n=1301) HR (95%CI) P-value 82.7% 83.7% 0.87 (0.72-1.07) .18 -- -- 0.84 (0.64-1.12) .23 None of the subgroups examined (age, baseline ECOG performance status, region, race, menopausal status, tumor size, # of positive LNs, adjuvant chemotherapy, HR status, and surgery) showed a significant effect on invasive DFS Safety results Adverse events Any AE Grade ≥3 AE Grade 5 AE AE leading to chemo and/or bev discontinuation AE leading to bev discontinuation Chemo alone (n=1271) Chemo + bevacizumab (n=1288) 99% 57% 0.2% 99% 72% 0.3% 2% -- 20% 18% Cameron et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S6-5 BEATRICE: Phase III Trial of Adjuvant Bevacizumab in Triple-Negative Breast Cancer • Grade ≥3 AEs of special interest by treatment phase Chemotherapy phase Adverse events Observation/bev only phase Chemo Chemo + bev Chemo Chemo + bev All grade ≥3 AEs of special interest 3% 11% <1% 9% Arterial thrombotic event <1% <1% <1% <1% Venous thromboembolic event 1% 2% <1% <1% Bleeding <1% <1% <1% 0 CHF/left ventricular dysfunction <1% <1% <1% 2% Hypertension <1% 7% <1% 5% Fistula/abscess <1% 0 0 <1% 0 <1% 0 0 <1% <1% 0 2% 0 <1% 0 <1% <1% <1% 0 <1% Gastrointestinal perforation Proteinuria RPLS Wound-healing complication – 5%-8% of patients taking bevacizumab + an anthracycline-based regimen experienced an LVEF decline, and ~1% experienced class III/IV CHF. Over 80% of these AEs resolved at the time of data cut-off Cameron et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S6-5 BEATRICE Trial: Biomarker Results • Biomarker analysis performed to investigate potential predictive markers of benefit from adjuvant bevacizumab • Sub-study included 45% of total patient population • Evaluated correlation of biomarkers with invasive disease-free survival Baseline Plasma Concentration HR* P-Value Median VEGF-A High 0.81 Low 0.89 .7415 3rd Quartile VEGF-A High 0.64 Low 0.92 .3551 Median VEGFR-2 High .61 Low 1.24 .0291 * HR <1.0 indicates CT plus Bev better than CT alone Carmeliet et al., SABCS 2012; abstract P3-06-34 • NCCN Analysis of Leukemia Diagnoses in Breast Cancer Patients Rationale: – Adjuvant therapy provides great benefit but also infrequently causes leukemia • Objective: – Examine the incidence of leukemia among breast cancer survivors – Identify clinical characteristics of women with breast cancer who develop leukemia Stage I-III breast cancer diagnosis at NCCN (July 1997 – Dec 2008) N=22,248 excluded Prior history of cancer n=1715 First diagnosis of breast cancer n=20,533 Censored at date of last NCCN contact Censored at first date of other cancer event Died while being followed at NCCN Patients with leukemia n=16092 n=3935 n=455 n=51; 0.25% Patients without leukemia, n=20,482 Karp et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S3-5 NCCN Analysis of Leukemia Diagnoses in Breast Cancer Patients *Chemotherapy Regimens Included: 4 Cycles: AC or EC, FA50C or FE100C, TC 6 Cycles: CMF, CAF, TAC, FA50C or FE100C No leukemia Leukemia Patient characteristic (n=20,482) (n=51) P-value Median age 53.9 years 60.2 years .02 Race White African American Other 87% 8% 5% 92% 6% 2% .72 Surgery Breast conservation Mastectomy None 57% 42% 1% 55% 45% 0 .85 Radiation therapy After breast conservation or none After mastectomy None 54% 17% 29% 55% 24% 22% .32 Chemotherapy “A and/ or C”* 4 cycles 6 cycles None or endocrine therapy only 51% 11% 38% 61% 12% 27% .31 Local and systemic therapy Radiation but no chemotherapy Chemotherapy but no radiation Chemotherapy and radiation None 25% 16% 46% 13% 24% 18% 55% 4% .22 Karp et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S3-5 NCCN Analysis of Leukemia Diagnoses in Breast Cancer Patients • • Characteristics of leukemia cohort: Event n Median time to leukemia Leukemia 51 3.3 years Myeloid leukemia (with cytogenetics) 40 3.5 years Lymphoid leukemia 7 2.0 years Hazard ratios for risk of developing leukemia: Risk factor • HR P-value Radiation vs. no radiation 1.29 (0.66-2.54) .46 Chemotherapy vs. no chemotherapy 2.51 (1.29-4.9) .007 Chemotherapy + radiation vs. chemotherapy only or radiation only 1.59 (0.88-2.88) .127 Incidence of developing leukemia: – 0.32% at 5 years – 0.52% at 10 years Karp et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S3-5 Metastatic Breast Cancer Phase III Trial of Eribulin vs. Capecitabine in Previously Treated Advanced Breast Cancer • Study 301 global, open-label design (N=1102) Eligibility criteria: • Locally advanced or metastatic breast cancer • 0-3 prior chemotherapies (≤ 2 for advanced disease) • Prior anthracycline and taxane • Refractory to most recent chemotherapy R A N D O M I Z E Eribulin 1.4 mg/m2, days 1 & 8, q3w Capecitabine 1250 mg/m2 BID PO, days 1-14, q3w Primary endpoint: OS and PFS Secondary endpoints: QOL, ORR, duration of response, 1-, 2-, 3-yr survival rates, tumor-related symptom assessments, safety parameters, population PK Final analysis declared positive if either eribulin OS significantly better than capecitabine OS or eribulin PFS significantly better than capecitabine PFS and if OS HR < 1.0 Kaufman et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S6-6 Phase III Trial of Eribulin vs. Capecitabine in Previously Treated Advanced Breast Cancer • Study 301 efficacy results Outcome Eribulin (n=554) Capecitabine (n=548) HR (95%CI) P-value Median PFS (independent review) (investigator review) 4.1 months 4.2 months 4.2 months 4.1 months 1.08 (0.93-1.25) 0.98 (0.86-1.11) .31 .74 Median OS 15.9 months 14.5 months 0.88 (0.77-1.003) .056 17.8% 14.5% -- .18 Objective response rate (independent review) (investigator review) 11% 16% 12% 20% --- .85 0.10 Clinical benefit rate (independent review) (investigator review) 26% 33% 27% 34% --- --- 3-yr OS – Pre-specified exploratory analyses suggest that 3 subgroups may have increased therapeutic benefit with eribulin: Triple-negative (HR 0.70, 0.55-0.91) ER-negative (HR 0.78, 0.64-0.96) HER2-negative (HR 0.84, 0.72-0.98) Kaufman et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S6-6 Phase III Trial of Eribulin vs. Capecitabine in Previously Treated Advanced Breast Cancer • Study 301 safety results Eribulin (n=544) Capecitabine (n=546) Any AEs Treatment-related AEs Serious AEs 94.1% 84.6% 17.5% 90.5% 77.1% 21.1% Fatal AEs Treatment-related fatal AEs 4.8% 0.9% 6.6% 0.7% Treatment-related AEs leading to: Discontinuation of treatment Dose reduction Dose delay 5.7% 31.1% 22.8% 6.2% 31.3% 29.3% Adverse events Kaufman et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S6-6 Phase III Trial of Eribulin vs. Capecitabine in Previously Treated Advanced Breast Cancer • Study 301 hematologic AEs Eribulin (n=544) Hematologic AEs Capecitabine (n=546) All grades Grade 3 Grade 4 All grades Grade 3 Grade 4 Neutropenia 54% 25% 21% 16% 4% <1% Leukopenia 31% 13% 2% 10% 2% <1% Anemia 19% 2% 0 18% <1% <1% Thrombocytopenia 5% <1% 0 6% <1% <1% Febrile neutropenia 2% 2% <1% <1% <1% <1% Kaufman et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S6-6 Phase III Trial of Eribulin vs. Capecitabine in Previously Treated Advanced Breast Cancer • Study 301 non-hematologic AEs Eribulin (n=544) Non-hematologic AEs Capecitabine (n=546) All grades Grade 3 Grade 4 All grades Grade 3 Grade 4 Hand-foot syndrome <1% 0 0 45% 14% 0 Alopecia 35% - - 4% - - Diarrhea 14% 1% 0 29% 5% <1% Nausea 22% <1% 0 24% 2% 0 Vomiting 12% <1% <1% 17% 2% 0 Fatigue 17% 2% 0 15% 2% <1% Asthenia 15% 4% <1% 15% 4% 0 Decreased appetite 13% <1% 0 15% 2% 0 Peripheral sensory neuropathy 13% 4% 0 7% <1% 0 Pyrexia 13% <1% 0 6% <1% 0 Headache 13% <1% 0 10% <1% <1% Dyspnea 10% 2% <1% 11% 3% <1% Back pain 10% 2% 0 8% <1% 0 Kaufman et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S6-6 Phase II Trial of Eribulin Mesylate as FirstLine Therapy for HER2- Locally Recurrent or Metastatic Breast Cancer • Eribulin: 1.4 mg/m2 days 1, 8 every 3 weeks • 48 patients enrolled All Patients (n=48) ER+ (n=35) ER-/PR-/HER2(n=10) CR 0 0 0 PR 27% 29% 30% ORR 27% 29% 30% SD 48% 54% 30% CBR * 46% 54% 30% Median PFS 5.9 months 6.7 months 4.7 months TTR 1.4 months 1.4 months 2.9 months DOR 7.4 months 7.4 months Not Evaluable * CBR = CR + PR + durable SD Vahdat et al., SABCS 2012; abstract P1-12-02 Retrospective Analysis of nab-Paclitaxel as FirstLine Therapy for MBC with Poor Prognostic Factors • Retrospective analysis of the efficacy and safety of patients with poor prognostic factors (DFI ≤ 2 years or visceral-dominant metastases) who received first-line treatment in 2 previous randomized trials. ORR Visceral-Dominant Metastases Short DFI 42% (P=.022) 43% 23% 33% nab-Paclitaxel (300 mg/m2 q3w) 44% 35% nab-Paclitaxel (100 mg/m2 qw 3/4) 63% Study CA012 nab-Paclitaxel (260 mg/m2 q3w) Paclitaxel (175 mg/m2 q3w) Study CA024 P=.020 52% P<.001 nab-Paclitaxel (150 mg/m2 qw 3/4) P=.002 76% 64% P<.001 Docetaxel (100 mg/m2 q3w) 37% 21% O’Shaughnessy et al., SABCS 2012; abstract P1-12-07 Retrospective Analysis of nab-Paclitaxel as FirstLine Therapy for MBC with Poor Prognostic Factors Median PFS (months) Visceral-Dominant Metastases Short DFI nab-Paclitaxel (260 mg/m2 q3w) 5.6 5.0 Paclitaxel (175 mg/m2 q3w) 3.8 3.5 0.717 (P=.094) 0.729 (P=.220) nab-Paclitaxel (300 mg/m2 q3w) 10.9 7.4 nab-Paclitaxel (100 mg/m2 qw 3/4) 7.5 7.3 nab-Paclitaxel (150 mg/m2 qw 3/4) 13.1 14.1 Docetaxel (100 mg/m2 q3w) 7.8 5.5 C vs D: 0.600 (P=.019) B vs C: 1.731 (P=.010) Overall P=.049 All NS Study CA012 HR (P-Value) Study CA024 HR (P-Value) O’Shaughnessy et al., SABCS 2012; abstract P1-12-07 Impact of BRCA1/2 Mutation Status on Response to Platinum-Based Chemotherapy in Triple-Negative Breast Cancer in the TBCRC009 Trial • The TBCRC009 phase II trial evaluated single-agent cisplatin or carboplatin as first- or second-line therapy for metastatic TNBC ORR Median PFS All Patients n=86 BRCA1/2 Positive n=11 BRCA1/2 WT n=65 Unknown n=10 30.2% 54.6%* 26.2% 30% 88 days 96 days 86 days -- * P=.079 versus BRCA1/2 WT • 6 patients (7%) are long-term survivors who achieved durable responses and remain off all therapy (22+ - 53+ months); all of these patients are BRCA1/2 WT (5) or unknown (1), and received platinum therapy as first-line treatment for MBC Isakoff et al., SABCS 2012; abstract PD-09-03 Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy in Breast Cancer Patients ≤ 35 Years Old • • Rationale: – Previous studies have shown that patients who are diagnosed with breast cancer at a young age have distinctly different disease characteristics, including pCR rate,1 biomarker profile,2 and prognosis3,4 – Objective: Compare the impact of age on pCR (pathologic complete response) rate, DFS, LRFS (local recurrence-free survival), and OS in patients receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer Study design: – A meta-analysis was performed on 8 neoadjuvant trials describing almost 9000 patients – Patients were divided into 3 age groups: • ≤ 35 (n=704) • 36-50 (n=4167) • ≥ 51 (n=4078) 1Huober et al. Breast Cancer Res Treat. 2010;124:133-40 2Colleoni et al. Ann Oncol. 2002;13:273-9 3Kroman et al. BMJ. 2000;320:474-8 4Anders et al. J Clin Oncol. 2008;26:3324-30 Loibl et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S3-1 Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy in Breast Cancer Patients ≤ 35 Years Old • pCR rate results: – pCR rates were significantly higher in patients ≤35 years old (23.6%) compared with those 36-50 (17.5%) and with those ≥ 51 (13.5%; P < .0001) – Age was an independent predictor of pCR for those patients with HR-positive, HER2-negative or triplenegative (TNBC) tumors – For patients ≤35 years old with HR-positive, HER2negative tumors, a pCR predicted better DFS • pCR rate Age ≤ 35 vs. age ≥ 51 Overall P = .002 HR+/HER2- P = .013 HR+/HER2+ P = .73 HR-/HER2+ P = .61 TNBC P = .004 Survival results: – Very young patients had significantly worse DFS and LRFS, but not OS, when compared with either of the older age groups Age ≤ 35 vs. age 36-50 Age 36-50 vs. age ≥ 51 Age ≤ 35 vs. age ≥ 51 DFS P = .031 P = .057 P = .022 LRFS P = .017 P = .024 P = .00018 OS P = .22 P = .14 P = .64 Survival Loibl et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S3-1 Clinical Implications • ‘Adjuvant’ chemotherapy may benefit ER-negative patients • • • • • with treated locoregional recurrence Leukemia risk may be 0.5% at 10 years after adjuvant anthracycline or cyclophosphamide chemotherapy Eribulin effective after A/T early in MBC treatment. Efficacy in TNBC promising First-line eribulin is safe and active Nab-paclitaxel retains efficacy in poor-prognosis MBC patients Platinum has activity in mTNBC and some first-line patients can have very durable response Advances in the Treatment of ER+ Breast Cancer Kimberly Blackwell, MD Adjuvant Therapy Relative Effectiveness of Letrozole vs Tamoxifen for Lobular Cancer in BIG 1-98 Cohort • • Rationale: – Most classic lobular carcinoma is HR-positive and HER2-negative – However, limited data are available regarding the use of letrozole in classic lobular cancers – Objective: Evaluate the effectiveness of adjuvant letrozole compared with adjuvant tamoxifen in patients with lobular cancer (broken down by Luminal A and Luminal B subtypes) enrolled in the BIG 1-98 trial Patient cohort: – Patients from BIG 1-98 with postmenopausal HR-positive disease receiving 5 years of letrozole or 5 years of tamoxifen (n=4922) – Patients eligible for this analysis with HR-positive, HER2-negative disease: • Ductal histology (n=2,599): 55.3% Luminal A, 44.7% Luminal B • Classic lobular histology (n=324): 73.1% Luminal A, 26.9% Luminal B Filho et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S1-1 Relative Effectiveness of Letrozole vs Tamoxifen for Lobular Cancer in BIG 1-98 Cohort • Ductal DFS results: Treatment • 5-yr DFS 8-yr DFS HR (95% CI) Letrozole 88% 82% Tamoxifen 84% 75% 0.80 (0.68-0.94) Lobular DFS results: Treatment • Interaction P-value: .03 5-yr DFS 8-yr DFS HR (95% CI) Letrozole 89% 82% Tamoxifen 75% 66% 0.48 (0.31-0.74) Luminal A/B DFS results: – Luminal A disease showed an interaction P-value of .049 for DFS – Luminal B disease was not significant for DFS (P = .23) Filho et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S1-1 Relative Effectiveness of Letrozole vs Tamoxifen for Lobular Cancer in BIG 1-98 Cohort • Multivariate analysis for DFS: Histology • HR (95% CI) Favors Ductal Luminal A 0.95 (0.76-1.20) -- Ductal Luminal B 0.64 (0.53-0.79) Letrozole Lobular Luminal A 0.49 (0.32-0.78) Letrozole Lobular Luminal B 0.33 (0.21-0.55) Letrozole Interactions: – Treatment by histology (ductal vs. lobular): P = .006 – Treatment by subtype (Luminal A vs. Luminal B): P = .01 • Multivariate analysis for OS: Histology • HR (95% CI) Favors Ductal 0.69 (0.57-0.85) Letrozole Lobular 0.39 (0.22-0.68) Letrozole Interaction: treatment by histology: P = .035 Filho et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S1-1 ATLAS: Effect of 10 vs 5 Years of Adjuvant Tamoxifen in the First 2 Decades After Diagnosis • Rationale: – An EBCTCG meta-analysis has shown that 5 years of adjuvant tamoxifen produces a lower risk of breast cancer death compared with no tamoxifen (23.6% vs. 32.7% at 15 years, P < .00001)1 – Treatment with 5 years of tamoxifen is currently the standard hormonal therapy for premenopausal women with early-stage, ER-positive breast cancer – Objective: Estimate the effect of 10 years of tamoxifen on ER-positive breast cancer recurrence and mortality compared with 5 years of tamoxifen • ATLAS study design: (N = 6846) Eligibility criteria: • ER-positive breast cancer • Completed 5 years of tamoxifen therapy R A N D O M I Z E Discontinue tamoxifen Continue tamoxifen daily for 5 years 1EBCTCG, Lancet 2011;378:771-84 Davies et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S1-2 ATLAS: Effect of 10 vs 5 Years of Adjuvant Tamoxifen in the First 2 Decades After Diagnosis Tamoxifen Recurrence treatment at 15 years duration (%) 5 years 711 (25.1%) 10 years 617 (21.4%) Risk of recurrence during years 5-9 HR (95% CI) Risk of recurrence during years 10+ HR (95% CI) P-value (all years) 0.90 (0.79-1.02) 0.75 (0.62-0.90) .002 Median F/u = 8 years for compliance, recurrence, death Davies et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S1-2 ATLAS: Effect of 10 vs 5 Years of Adjuvant Tamoxifen in the First 2 Decades After Diagnosis • Breast cancer mortality: 10 vs 5 years tamoxifen (ATLAS) HR (95% CI) 5 vs 0 years tamoxifen (EBCTCG) HR (95% CI) 10 vs 0 years tamoxifen (estimated as the product of HRs) HR (95% CI) 0-4 1.0 0.71*** (0.62-0.80) 0.71*** (0.62-0.81) 5-9 0.97 (0.79-1.18) 0.66*** (0.58-0.75) 0.64** (0.50-0.82) 10+ 0.71* (0.58-0.88) 0.73** (0.62-0.86) 0.52*** (0.40-0.68) Period (years) *P = .0016 **P = .0001 ***P < .00001 – 10 years of tamoxifen is estimated to reduce breast cancer mortality by one-third in the first decade and by one-half in the second decade Davies et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S1-2 ATLAS: Effect of 10 vs 5 Years of Adjuvant Tamoxifen in the First 2 Decades After Diagnosis • Mortality comparison: Mortality cause Due to side effects (endometrial cancer and pulmonary embolisms) Due to breast cancer 10 vs 5 years tamoxifen (ATLAS) 5 vs 0 years tamoxifen (EBCTCG) 10 vs 0 years tamoxifen (estimated by addition) 0.2% loss 0.2% loss 0.4% loss 3% gain 9% gain 12% gain – The above chart shows that the risk of death caused by tamoxifen side effects is greatly outweighed by the benefit in the reduced risk of death from breast cancer provided by 10 years of tamoxifen therapy Davies et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S1-2 Metastatic Breast Cancer CONFIRM: Effect of Fulvestrant 500 mg vs 250 mg on Survival in Postmenopausal Women • Objective: – Compare fulvestrant 500 mg/month with 250 mg/month (approved dosing) for the treatment of postmenopausal women with ER-positive advanced breast cancer whose disease progressed after previous hormonal therapy • CONFIRM Phase III study design: (N = 735) Eligibility criteria: • Postmenopausal • Advanced ER-positive breast cancer • Disease progression during or after prior hormonal therapy Primary endpoint: PFS R A N D O M I Z E Fulvestrant 500 mg Intramuscular injections on days 0, 14, 28, and every 28 days thereafter Fulvestrant 250 mg Intramuscular injections on days 0, 28, and every 28 days thereafter (with placebo injections on day 14) Di Leo et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S1-4 CONFIRM: Effect of Fulvestrant 500 mg vs 250 mg on Survival in Postmenopausal Women • Baseline characteristics appeared well-balanced between treatment arms • Efficacy results: Timing of analysis Fulvestrant 500 mg Fulvestrant 250 mg HR (95% CI) Median PFS First† 6.5 months 5.5 months 0.80* (0.68-0.94) Median OS First† 25.1 months 22.8 months 0.84** (0.69-1.03) Median OS Final‡ 26.4 months 22.3 months 0.81*** (0.69-0.96) Outcome *P = .006 **P = .001 ***P = .016 †First analysis was performed at 50% maturity analysis was performed at 75% maturity ‡ Final – Subsequent therapies were well-balanced between arms, with approximately 60% of patients receiving subsequent chemotherapy and approximately one-third receiving other hormonal therapy Di Leo et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S1-4 CONFIRM: Effect of Fulvestrant 500 mg vs 250 mg on Survival in Postmenopausal Women • Safety results (reported during main trial + follow-up phase) : Fulvestrant 500 mg n=361 Fulvestrant 250 mg n=374 Any serious AE 35 (9.7%) 27 (7.2%) Any causally related serious AE 8 (2.2%) 4 (1.1%) Serious AEs • A total of 11 SAEs led to death: Fulvestrant 500 mg Fulvestrant 250 mg Cardiopulmonary failure (1) Acute myocardial infarction (1) Cause unknown (1) Acute renal failure Dyspnea (2) Aspiration Intestinal adenocarcinoma (1) Suicide Hypertension Meningitis Di Leo et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S1-4 Phase III BOLERO-2 Trial: Exemestane +/- Everolimus in Advanced BC N = 724 • Postmenopausal ER+ • Unresectable locally advanced or metastatic BC R 2: • Recurrence or progression 1 after letrozole or anastrozole Endpoints EVE 10 mg daily + EXE 25 mg daily (n = 485) Placebo + EXE 25 mg daily (n = 239) Stratification: Sensitivity to prior hormone therapy and presence of visceral metastases • Primary: PFS (local assessment) • Secondary: OS, ORR, QOL, safety, bone markers, PK Hortobagyi G et al. SABCS 2011 (Abstract #S3-7), Baselga, NEJM 2011 BOLERO-2 Trial: Final Progression-Free Survival Analysis (18-month follow-up) PFS (months) Local review EVE + EXE PBO + EXE HR (95% CI) P-Value 7.8 3.2 0.45 <.0001 (95% CI, 0.38-0.54) Central review 11.0 4.1 0.38 <.0001 (95% CI, 0.31-0.48) w/ visceral mets 6.83 2.76 0.47 -- (95% CI, 0.37-0.60) w/o visceral mets 9.86 4.21 0.41 -- (95% CI, 0.31-0.55) Bone-only mets 12.88 5.29 0.33 -- (95% CI, 0.21-0.53) Progression after neoadj therapy 11.50 4.07 0.39 -- (95% CI, 0.25-0.62) • PFS impact consistent across all prospectively defined subgroups • Overall survival data still not mature (HR=0.77; 95% CI, 0.57-1.04) • Most common grade 3 or 4 AEs were stomatitis (8%), hyperglycemia (5%), and fatigue (4%) Swain et al., SABCS 2012; abstract P6-04-02 LEA: Effect of Adding Bevacizumab to First-Line Endocrine Therapy in Advanced Breast Cancer • Rationale: – Clinical data suggest that downregulation of VEGF may overcome endocrine therapy resistance and improve efficacy to hormonal therapy1 – Endocrine therapy + bevacizumab has been shown to be safe and active in phase II testing2,3 – Objective: Determine whether bevacizumab can delay resistance to endocrine therapy in patients with HR-positive advanced breast cancer • LEA Phase III, open-label, multicenter study design: (N = 380) Endocrine therapy Eligibility criteria: R • Postmenopausal • Advanced HR-positive, HER2negative breast cancer • No previous therapy for advanced disease Primary endpoint: PFS A N D O M I Z E Letrozole 2.5 mg/d or fulvestrant 250 mg q28d Endocrine therapy + bevacizumab Letrozole 2.5 mg/d or fulvestrant 250 mg q28d + bevacizumab 15 mg/kg q 1Ryden et al. J Clin Oncol. 2005;23:4695-704 et al. Clin Breast Cancer. 2010;10(4):275-80 3Traina et al. J Clin Oncol, 2010;28(4):628-33 Martin et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S1-7 2Forero-Torres LEA: Effect of Adding Bevacizumab to First-Line Endocrine Therapy in Advanced Breast Cancer • Results: – Baseline characteristics were well-balanced: • Approximately 80% had metastatic disease • Approximately 50% had received previous adjuvant hormonal therapy • Approximately 90% of patients received letrozole; the remainder received fulvestrant Outcome Endocrine therapy Endocrine therapy + Bevacizumab HR (95% CI) P-value Median PFS 13.8 months 18.4 months 0.83 (0.65-1.06) .14 Median OS 42 months 41 months 1.18 (0.77-1.81) .47 – Adverse events increased on the bevacizumab-containing arm included leukopenia and thrombocytopenia (P < .01); also fatigue, hypertension, hemorrhage, elevated liver enzymes, and proteinuria (P < .001). Martin et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S1-7 TRIO-18: Addition of CDK Inhibitor PD 0332991 to Letrozole for Advanced Breast Cancer • Rationale: – PD 0332991 is an oral highly selective cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) 4/6 inhibitor that prohibits cell cycle progression – It has been shown that PD 0332991 has synergistic activity in combination with hormonal therapy (tamoxifen)1 – A Phase I/II study of letrozole and PD 0332991 was initiated – The phase 1 portion has been completed and the dose of PD 0332991 selected – Phase II study design Eligibility criteria: • ER-positive, HER2negative disease • Locally recurrent or metastatic • Previously untreated for advanced disease • CCND1 amplification and/or loss of p16 Primary endpoint: PFS (N=99) R A N D O M I Z E PD 0332991 125 mg QD* + letrozole 2.5 mg QD *3 weeks on, 1 week off Letrozole 2.5 mg QD 1Musgrove et al. Nat Rev Can. 2011;11:558-72 Finn et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S1-6 TRIO-18: Addition of CDK Inhibitor PD 0332991 to Letrozole for Advanced Breast Cancer • Second interim analysis (50% of events) efficacy results: PD 991 + letrozole (n=84) Letrozole (n=81) HR (95% CI) P-value Median PFS, months 26.1 7.5 0.37 (0.21-0.63) < .001 Objective response rate 34% 26% -- -- Clinical benefit rate 70% 44% -- -- Outcome • Second interim analysis treatment administration results: PD 991 + letrozole (n=83) Letrozole (n=77) 8.9 months 5.1 months Dose interruptions, % of cycles 71% 22% Cycle delays 75% NA Dose reductions 35% NA Outcome Median duration of treatment Finn et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S1-6 TRIO-18: Addition of CDK Inhibitor PD 0332991 to Letrozole for Advanced Breast Cancer • Second interim analysis most common treatment-related AE results (≥10%): PD 991 + letrozole (n=83) AE Letrozole (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 Finn et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S1-6 Neoadjuvant Therapy Z1031B Phase II Neoadjuvant AI Trial: Triage to Chemotherapy If Ki67 Level >10% at 2-4 Weeks • Postmenopausal patients with stage 2 or 3 ER+ breast cancer initiated preoperative AI therapy and underwent biopsy at 2-4 weeks. – If Ki67 >10%: switch to NCCN-guideline chemotherapy or immediate surgery – If Ki67 <10%: continue on AI for 16-18 weeks • 49 patients had a Ki67 score >10% – 35 received standard neoadjuvant chemotherapy – pCR rate was only 6% and did not meet criteria for adequate activity • 166 patients had a Ki67 score <10% – 37% had a preoperative endocrine prognostic index (PEPI) score of 0, indicating a very low relapse risk – 94% of these patients accepted a recommendation of no adjuvant chemotherapy Ellis et al., SABCS 2012; abstract PD-07-01 FEMZONE Trial: Phase II Study of Neoadjuvant Letrozole With or Without Zoledronic Acid for Postmenopausal ER+ Breast Cancer • Postmenopausal patients with ER+/PgR+ breast cancer received 6 months of preoperative therapy with letrozole alone (n=79) or with zoledronic acid 4 mg q4w (n=89); accrual did not reach planned numbers. ORR (6 month; Central Review) Breast-conserving surgery LET LET + ZA P Value 54.5% 69% .106 76% 72% -- • Adverse events were consistent with known safety profiles of individual agents; no deaths or reports of osteonecrosis of the jaw; no differences in QoL between arms. Fasching et al., SABCS 2012; abstract PD-07-02 UNICANCER CARMINA 02 Trial Evaluating Neoadjuvant Anastrozole or Fulvestrant for Postmenopausal ER+/HER2- Breast Cancer • Randomized Phase II Trial – Anastrozole 1 mg/day for 4-6 months (n=59) – Fulvestrant 500 mg days 1, 15, and 29, then q4w (n=57) Anastrozole Fulvestrant Clinical Response Rate 62% 53% Breast Conservation 64% 53% • No grade 3/4 adverse events or SAEs reported • Most common AEs were grade 1 hot flushes and musculoskeletal symptoms Lerebours et al., SABCS 2012; abstract PD-07-04 Bone-Targeted Therapies Bone Biomarker Analysis From AZURE Study of Zoledronic Acid Added to Standard Therapy • AZURE study design and primary results (N=3360) Eligibility criteria: • Stage II/III breast cancer R A N D O M I Z E Standard therapy Both groups were instructed to take calcium and vitamin D supplements for 6 months; supplements were at the discretion of the physician thereafter Standard therapy + zoledronic acid 4 mg First 6 months: q3-4 weeks Next 2 years: q3 months Next 2.5 years: q6 months – No difference in invasive DFS between groups (HR 0.98, P = .73), but, among postmenopausal women, invasive DFS favored zoledronic acid group (HR 0.75, P = .02) and OS favored zoledronic acid group (HR 0.74, P = .04)1 1Coleman et al. N Engl J Med. 2011;365:1396-1405 Rathbone et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S6-4 Bone Biomarker Analysis From AZURE Study of Zoledronic Acid Added to Standard Therapy • AZURE biomarker study design – Goals • Identify specific prognostic factors for development of bone metastasis • Identify predictive markers for benefit from zoledronic acid treatment • Classify menopausal status using reproductive hormone levels – Biomarker population consisted of 872 patients who consented to serum storage at baseline • Biomarker population was similar to the overall population in baseline characteristics and in primary outcomes – Bone biomarkers analyzed: • PINP (measure of bone formation) • CTX (measure of bone turnover) • Vitamin D • N=766 (87.8%) had insufficient levels <30 ng/mL Rathbone et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S6-4 Bone Biomarker Analysis From AZURE Study of Zoledronic Acid Added to Standard Therapy • Biomarker results for overall biomarker population – • Biomarker (levels at baseline) Time to bone recurrence Time to distant recurrence HR (95% CI) P-value HR (95% CI) P-value PINP 1.15 (0.68-1.94) .60 0.86 (0.60-1.23) .41 CTX 1.43 (0.87-2.35) .16 1.21 (0.87-1.70) .26 Vitamin D 0.11 (0.02-0.76) .03 0.56 (0.31-1.01) .05 Insufficient baseline vitamin D levels predict recurrence Biomarker results among postmenopausal women (who appear to benefit from zoledronic acid, according to AZURE) • Increased bone markers do not predict treatment benefit • High vitamin D levels predict benefit for zoledronic acid: HR 0.09 (0.01-0.82) Rathbone et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S6-4 ZICE Trial: Phase III Comparison of Zoledronate vs Ibandronate for the Treatment of Bone Metastases • Patients with histologically confirmed breast cancer with bone metastases were randomized to 96 weeks of therapy with either: – Zoledronate: 4 mg IV every 3-4 weeks (n=699) – Ibandronate 50 mg PO daily (n=705) • Ibandronate failed to demonstrate non-inferiority with regard to annual skeletal event rate (0.412 for Z vs. 0.495 for I; P=.13) • Both agents similar in delaying time to first SRE (HR 1.04; P=.63) • Similar median survival between arms • Renal AEs more frequent with zoledronate • Osteonecrosis similar between arms – 0.71% with I vs. 1.29% with Z; P = 0.28 Barrett-Lee et al., SABCS 2012; abstract PD-07-09 Clinical Implications • The more endocrine-sensitive a ESBC is, the larger proportional benefit for adjuvant endocrine therapy (esp. estrogen-deprivation approaches). • Longer duration of endocrine therapy appears to have a net + survival benefit. • HD Fulvestrant improves survival in MBC. • Novel targeted therapies are making impact on DFS/OS in ER+ MBC. • No clear marker of benefit with adjuvant zoledronic acid, although relationship between low vitamin D levels and risk for recurrence. Emerging Therapies for HER2+ Breast Cancer Hope S. Rugo, MD Adjuvant Therapy Questions • What is the most appropriate duration for adjuvant trastuzumab? • Is the benefit of adjuvant trastuzumab maintained with longterm follow-up? • Does compliance with adjuvant trastuzumab matter? HERA Final Analysis: 2 Years vs. 1 Year of Trastuzumab After Adjuvant Chemotherapy • HERA study design and previous results (N=5102) Eligibility criteria: • HER2-positive invasive early breast cancer • Received surgery + (neo)adjuvant chemotherapy ± radiation therapy • Then, centrally confirmed IHC 3+ or FISH+ and LVEF ≥55% Stratification: nodal status, adjuvant chemotherapy regimen, HR status and endocrine therapy, age, region R A N D O M I Z E 1 year trastuzumab (n=1703) 8 mg/kg loading dose, 6 mg/kg maintenance, q3w 2 years trastuzumab (n=1701) 8 mg/kg loading dose, 6 mg/kg maintenance, q3w Observation (n=1698) After ASCO 2005, patients given option to switch to trastuzumab Primary endpoint: DFS (1 yr vs. obs, 2 yr vs. obs) Secondary endpoint: DFS (1 yr vs. 2 yr), OS – First interim analysis at median 2 years follow-up showed significant DFS benefit for 1 year trastuzumab over observation (HR = 0.54, P < .0001)1 1Piccart-Gebhart et al., N Engl J Med 2005;353:1659-72 Goldhirsch et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S5-2 HERA Final Analysis: 2 Years vs. 1 Year of Trastuzumab After Adjuvant Chemotherapy • 8-year median follow-up, efficacy results for 2 years vs. 1 year trastuzumab 2 years trastuzumab 1 year trastuzumab HR (95% CI) P-value 8-yr DFS HR-positive HR-negative 75.8% 76.1% 75.4% 76.0% 77.2% 74.7% 0.99 (0.85-1.14) 1.05 (0.85-1.25) 0.93 (0.76-1.14) .86 .67 .51 8-yr OS 86.4% 87.6% 1.05 (0.86-1.28) .63 Outcome • 8-year median follow-up, safety results for 2 years vs. 1 year trastuzumab 2 years trastuzumab (n=1673) 1 year trastuzumab (n=1682) ≥ 1 grade 3/4 AE 20.4% 16.3% Secondary cardiac event 7.2% 4.1% Primary cardiac event 1.0% 0.8% Fatal AE 1.2% 1.1% Outcome Goldhirsch et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S5-2 HERA Final Analysis: 2 Years vs. 1 Year of Trastuzumab After Adjuvant Chemotherapy • 8-year efficacy results for 1 year trastuzumab vs. observation Outcome Overall population HR, (P-value) HR-positive population HR, (P-value) HR-negative population HR, (P-value) DFS benefit 1 yr MFU 2 yr MFU 4 yr MFU 8 yr MFU 0.54, (<.0001) 0.64, (<.0001) 0.76, (<.0001) 0.76, (<.0001) 0.60, (.003) 0.68, (.005) 0.84, (.09) 0.81, (.03) 0.50, (<.0001) 0.62, (<.0001) 0.70, (<.0001) 0.72, (<.0001) OS benefit 1 yr MFU 2 yr MFU 4 yr MFU 8 yr MFU 0.76, (.26) 0.66, (.01) 0.85, (.11) 0.76, (.0005) 1.67, (.21) 0.69, (.21) 1.03, (.86) 0.84, (.14) 0.47, (.02) 0.64, (.03) 0.75, (.03) 0.70, (.0007) – Results are complicated by the fact that 52.1% of the patients in the observation group crossed over to receive trastuzumab after ASCO 2005 Goldhirsch et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S5-2 PHARE: Subset Analysis Comparing 6 Months vs. 12 Months of Trastuzumab as Adjuvant Therapy • PHARE non-inferiority randomized study design (N=3384) Eligibility criteria: • HER2-positive early breast cancer • Tumor size ≥ 10 mm • Received surgery + at least 4 cycles (neo)adjuvant chemotherapy ± radiation therapy Primary endpoint: non-inferiority of DFS with 6 months trastuzumab 6 months trastuzumab + any chemotherapy regimen R A N D O M I Z E 6 months trastuzumab No further trastuzumab Randomization was stratified by chemotherapy /trastuzumab timing, hormonal therapy, recruiting center Pivot et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S5-3 PHARE: Subset Analysis Comparing 6 Months vs. 12 Months of Trastuzumab as Adjuvant Therapy • DFS results, 42.5 months median follow-up 12 months trastuzumab (n=1690) 6 months trastuzumab (n=1690) Total events (n=394) 10.4% 13.0% Local recurrence 1.1% 1.4% Regional recurrence 0.6% 0.5% Distant recurrence 6.4% 8.3% Contralateral breast cancer 0.4% 0.7% Second primary malignancy 1.5% 1.5% Death 0.4% 0.5% DFS event – To be considered non-inferior, HR and CI should be between 1.0 and 1.15 DFS HR was 1.28 (1.05-1.56), which does not meet non-inferiority requirements1 1Pivot et al., ESMO 2012, LAB5_PR Pivot et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S5-3 PHARE: Subset Analysis Comparing 6 Months vs. 12 Months of Trastuzumab as Adjuvant Therapy • DFS subset analysis results, 42.5 months median follow-up DFS subset HR (95%CI) Meet non-inferiority requirements? ER-negative 1.34 (1.02-1.76) No ER-positive 1.23 (0.92-1.65) No Sequential chemotherapy 1.41 (1.06-1.86) No Concomitant chemotherapy 1.15 (0.87-1.53) No <50 years old 1.38 (1.01-1.89) No ≥50 years old 1.22 (0.94-1.57) No Node-negative 1.33 (0.95-1.87) No Node-positive 1.25 (0.97-1.60) No < 2-cm tumor 1.02 (0.72-1.44) No ≥2-cm tumor 1.41 (1.09-1.81) No Pivot et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S5-3 PHARE: Subset Analysis Comparing 6 Months vs. 12 Months of Trastuzumab as Adjuvant Therapy • DFS subset analysis interaction results, 42.5 months median follow-up HR (95% CI) Meet significant interaction requirements? ER-negative and sequential chemotherapy 1.57 (1.08-2.28) No, but almost ER-positive and sequential chemotherapy 1.25 (0.81-1.91) No ER-negative and concomitant chemotherapy 1.10 (0.73-1.65) No ER-positive and concomitant chemotherapy 1.23 (0.83-1.82) No DFS interaction – To be considered a significant interaction, HR and CI should be > 1.15 Pivot et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S5-3 NSABP B-31 and NCCTG N9831: Final Joint Analysis of Survival for Adjuvant Chemotherapy ± Trastuzumab • NSABP B-31 study design Control: AC→T Arm 1 Investigational: AC→T+H Arm 2 • NCCTG N9831 study design Control: AC→T Arm A Arm B Arm C Investigational: AC→T+H = doxorubicin/cyclophosphamide (AC) 60/600 mg/m2 q3w x 4 = paclitaxel (T) 175 mg/m2 q3w x 4 = paclitaxel (T) 80 mg/m2/wk x 12 = trastuzumab (H) 4mg/kg LD + 2 mg/kg/wk x 51 Romond et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S5-5 NSABP B-31 and NCCTG N9831: Final Joint Analysis of Survival for Adjuvant Chemotherapy ± Trastuzumab • Efficacy outcomes: 8.4 years of median follow-up Outcome AC→T+H (n=2028) AC→T (n=2018) HR (95% CI) P-value 10-yr DFS 73.7% 62.2% 0.60 (0.53-0.68) < .0001 10-yr OS 84.0% 75.2% 0.63 (0.54-0.73) < .0001 – The results likely underestimate the treatment effect because • 5% of the women in the AC→T+H arm did not receive trastuzumab because of cardiac concerns • 20% of the women in the AC→T arm received trastuzumab after ASCO 2005 Romond et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S5-5 NSABP B-31 and NCCTG N9831: Final Joint Analysis of Survival for Adjuvant Chemotherapy ± Trastuzumab • First DFS events AC→T+H (n=2028) AC→T (n=2018) Distant recurrence 11.2% 19.4% Local/regional recurrence 4.1% 6.1% Contralateral breast cancer 2.3% 2.0% Other second primary cancer 3.3% 3.7% Death without recurrence 1.9% 1.5% First DFS event • Distant recurrence by HR status AC→T+H Distant recurrence AC→T n % n % HR-positive 1110 12.7% 1105 22.3% HR-negative 917 11.9% 911 21.5% Romond et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S5-5 NSABP B-31 and NCCTG N9831: Final Joint Analysis of Survival for Adjuvant Chemotherapy ± Trastuzumab • OS by subgroup OS by subgroup HR Significantly favors trastuzumab arm? Age, years < 40 40-49 50-59 60+ 0.67 0.65 0.68 0.52 Yes Yes Yes Yes # of positive nodes 0 1-3 4-9 10+ 0.94 0.59 0.72 0.56 No Yes Yes Yes OS by subgroup HR Significantly favors trastuzumab arm? HR status Negative Positive 0.65 0.61 Yes Yes Tumor size, cm 0-2 2.1-5.0 5.1+ 0.51 0.68 0.58 Yes Yes Yes Histologic grade Good Intermediate Poor 0.11 0.52 0.67 Yes Yes Yes Romond et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S5-5 NSABP B-31 and NCCTG N9831: Final Joint Analysis of Survival for Adjuvant Chemotherapy ± Trastuzumab • Cumulative incidence of distant recurrence as first event at 10 years – ER and or PR positive • 22.3 vs 12.7% (9.6% difference) • No clear plateau in relapse – ER and PR negative • 21.5 vs 11.9% (9.6% difference) • Improvement in OS increased over time Years from randomization 4 6 8 10 Difference in OS 2.9 5.5 7.6 8.8 Reasons for and Impact of Noncompliance With NCCN Guidelines for Trastuzumab Use • Rationale – NCCN guidelines recommend 1 year of adjuvant trastuzumab for patients with stage I-III HER2-positive breast cancer, but many patients fail to complete therapy • Study design – Retrospective analysis of patients from a single institution (N=331) who were eligible for adjuvant trastuzumab – Clinician-documented reasons for noncompliance with NCCN adjuvant trastuzumab guidelines were examined – Impact of noncompliance on disease-related outcomes was tested Mullins et al., SABCS 2012; abstract P5-18-17 Reasons for and Impact of Noncompliance With NCCN Guidelines for Trastuzumab Use • Results – Median age was 53, and most patients had stage I (37%) or II (41%) disease – Physician-cited reasons for noncompliance included: • Small tumor size (30%) • Baseline cardiac dysfunction (24%) • Patient refusal (16%) • Advanced age (6%) • Development of metastases (6%) • Medication toxicity (5%) – Multivariate analysis identified age ≥70 (P < .001) and stage I disease (P = .001) as risk factors for noncompliance – Failure to complete adjuvant trastuzumab therapy was associated with: • Shorter DFS (P = .03) • Shorter OS (P = .0002) Mullins et al., SABCS 2012; abstract P5-18-17 Metastatic Breast Cancer Metastatic: Questions • Is survival improved with the addition of pertuzumab to standard chemotherapy/trastuzumab in the CLEOPATRA Trial? • Is this combination effective and safe in older patients? • Do biomarkers help us to identify those who might benefit from the addition of pertuzumab? • Can we substitute weekly paclitaxel for docetaxel? • How safe is T-DM1? • Can we safely substitute vinorelbine for capecitabine in combination with lapatinib? CLEOPATRA Biomarker Analysis: Phase III Placebo-Controlled Study of Pertuzumab • CLEOPATRA study design and primary results (N=808) R A N D O M I Z E Eligibility criteria: • HER2-positive centrally confirmed metastatic breast cancer • First-line Randomization was stratified by geographic region and prior treatment status (neo/adjuvant chemotherapy received or not) Placebo + trastuzumab Docetaxel (≥6 cycles recommended) Pertuzumab + trastuzumab Docetaxel (≥6 cycles recommended) Study dosing q3w until progression: − Pertuzumab/Placebo: − Trastuzumab: − Docetaxel: 840 mg loading dose, 420 mg maintenance 8 mg/kg loading dose, 6 mg/kg maintenance 75 mg/m2, escalating to 100 mg/m2 if tolerated – Significant improvements were observed in both PFS and OS with the addition of pertuzumab to trastuzumab and docetaxel for the treatment of HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer Baselga et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S5-1 CLEOPATRA: Confirmatory Overall Survival Analysis of Phase III Pertuzumab Study • Rationale – Interim (immature) OS results from the CLEOPATRA trial showed a trend in favor of adding pertuzumab to trastuzumab and docetaxel therapy (HR 0.64, 0.47-0.88)1 – This analysis provides confirmatory OS data using mature data • Study design – A second interim analysis of OS was performed with an additional 1 year of follow-up • Results at median follow-up of 30 months Second interim OS analysis Pertuzumab arm Placebo arm HR (95% CI) P-value 3-year estimated 66% 50% HR =0.66 (0.52-0.84) .0008 Not reached 37.6 months Median OS – This survival benefit was observed in nearly all subgroups analyzed – This second interim OS analysis was considered significant and confirmatory • Now crosses the O’Brien-Fleming stopping boundary 1Baselga et al. N Engl J Med. 2012;366:109-19 Swain et al., SABCS 2012; abstract P5-18-26 Effect of Pertuzumab Added to Trastuzumab and Docetaxel in Older Patients From CLEOPATRA • • Patients were divided into 2 age groups: <65 and ≥65 – Evaluates the benefit-risk ratio of adding pertuzumab in older patients – Of the 808 patients enrolled, 127 (15.7%) were ≥65 years old Safety – Diarrhea, fatigue, asthenia, decreased appetite, vomiting, and dysgeusia were more frequent in older patients, neutropenia and febrile neutropenia were less frequent; neuropathy was increased with pertuzumab in older patients – Dose reductions were more frequent in older patients • 26%-31% vs. 22%-25% – Older patients received fewer median cycles of docetaxel • 6.0-6.5 vs. 8.0 • Efficacy was similar Improvement in median PFS with pertuzumab HR (95% CI) P-value < 65 years old 4.7 months HR =0.65 (0.53-0.80) P < .0001 ≥ 65 years old 11.2 months HR = 0.52 (0.31-0.86) P = .0098 Subset 1Baselga et al. N Engl J Med. 2012;366:109-19 Miles et al., SABCS 2012; abstract P5-18-01 CLEOPATRA Biomarker Analysis: Phase III Placebo-Controlled Study of Pertuzumab • Biomarker analysis study design – Biomarkers were chosen from different parts of the HER2 signaling pathway: • HER2 ligands: AREG, EGF, TGFα, IGF1R, EGFR, HER2, HER3 • HER2 receptor, including soluble HER2 receptor • Intracellular signaling components: PI3K, Akt, PTEN • Nuclear component: c-Myc – Biomarkers were assayed using a number of methods: • IHC, qRT-PCR, FISH, mutational analysis, and ELISA – Two types of correlations were investigated: • Predictive effects – Associations of biomarkers with pertuzumab benefit • Prognostic effects – Relationship of biomarker to outcome independent of treatment arm Baselga et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S5-1 CLEOPATRA Biomarker Analysis: Phase III Placebo-Controlled Study of Pertuzumab • Biomarker predictive effects – Pertuzumab demonstrated PFS benefit across nearly all biomarker subgroups examined • Of 38 subgroups examined, 33 showed a significant PFS benefit for pertuzumab • The following biomarker subgroups favored pertuzumab but were not significant predictors: betacellulin mRNA high, HER3 membrane H-score high, IGF1R membrane H-score high, pAKT cytoplasm H-score high, pAKT nuclear H-score high • Biomarker prognostic effects Level correlating with better prognosis HR (95% CI) P-value Serum sHER2 Low 1.23 (1.01-1.49) .04 HER2 mRNA High 0.77 (0.63-0.93) .008 HER2 membrane H-score High 0.83 (0.69-1.00) .05 HER3 mRNA High 0.81 (0.66-0.98) .03 PIK3CA wildtype High 0.63 (0.49-0.80) .0001 Biomarker Baselga et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S5-1 CLEOPATRA Biomarker Analysis: Phase III Placebo-Controlled Study of Pertuzumab • Biomarker results: focus on PIK3CA – PIK3CA mutations were associated with poorer prognosis in the placebo arm: 5.2-month reduction in median PFS – PIK3CA mutation were associated with poorer prognosis in the pertuzumab arm: 9.3-month reduction in median PFS Placebo arm Median PFS Pertuzumab arm Median PFS HR (95%CI) Mutated 8.6 months 12.5 month 0.64 (0.43-0.93) Predictive ability Wild-type 13.8 months 21.8 months 0.67 (0.50-0.89) Predictive ability PIK3CA status Prognostic ability Prognostic ability – Mutations in PIK3CA were not associated with resistance to pertuzumab • Patients derived similar additional benefit from pertuzumab independent of PIK3CA mutational status – HER2 remains the best marker to predict benefit from HER2-directed therapy Baselga et al., SABCS 2012; abstract S5-1 A Phase II Study of Pertuzumab + Trastuzumab + Weekly Paclitaxel • Rationale – Evaluate the addition of pertuzumab to a regimen similar to that used in CLEOPATRA trial in a similar patient population • Replace q3w docetaxel with weekly paclitaxel, which may be more tolerable than docetaxel1 • Study design – Patients with HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer • 0-1 prior treatment for metastatic disease • Treated with pertuzumab (840 mg loading dose, 420 mg maintenance), trastuzumab (8 mg/kg loading dose, 6 mg/kg maintenance) q3w and paclitaxel 80 mg/m2 weekly – A target 6-month PFS rate of ≥65% was considered promising • Results – Of the 50 patients enrolled at the time of analysis, 33 were evaluable – The 6-month PFS rate was 76% and the response rate was 52% – No cardiac events were recorded at the time of analysis, although one woman was taken off study for an asymptomatic LVEF decline 1Sparano et al. N Engl J Med. 2008;358:1663-71 Datko et al., SABCS 2012; abstract P5-18-20 A Phase II Study of Eribulin + Trastuzumab in Advanced HER2-Positive Breast Cancer • Rationale – The microtubule inhibitor eribulin was approved as monotherapy for patients with relapsed/refractory advanced breast cancer based on a 2.5-month improvement in OS over physician’s choice treatment1 – Objective: Explore the activity and safety of eribulin + trastuzumab in the first-line treatment of patients with HER2-positive advanced breast cancer • Study design – Patients with chemotherapy-naïve HER2-positive locally recurrent or metastatic breast cancer • Treated q3w with eribulin 1.4 mg/m2 on days 1 & 8 and trastuzumab 8 mg/kg loading dose (6 mg/kg subsequent doses) until progression • Results – 40 evaluable patients – The median number of cycles received was 7.0 for both eribulin and trastuzumab – Median PFS was 9.2 months and response rate was 55% – Most common treatment-related AEs were alopecia, fatigue, neutropenia, nausea, and peripheral neuropathy. The most common grade 3/4 AE was neutropenia (35%) 1Cortes et al. Lancet. 2011;377:914-23 Vahdat et al., SABCS 2012; abstract P5-20-04 Pooled Safety Analysis: Trastuzumab Emtansine in HER2-Positive Metastatic Breast Cancer • • Rationale – Trastuzumab emtansine (T-DM1) produced a 5.8-month improvement in OS over lapatinib + capecitabine in patients with HER2-positive advanced breast cancer1 – Objective: • Perform an integrated safety analysis of 882 patients who have been treated with single-agent T-DM1 in clinical trials Study design – Patients from 6 clinical trials and 1 extension study who received single-agent T-DM1 3.6 mg/kg q3w were included in this integrated safety analysis 1Verma et al. N Engl J Med. 2012;367:1783-91 Dieras et al., SABCS 2012; abstract P5-18-06 Pooled Safety Analysis: Trastuzumab Emtansine in HER2-Positive Metastatic Breast Cancer • Results – The most common AEs were: • Fatigue, nausea, headache, and thrombocytopenia – With the exception of fatigue, the most common grade ≥3 AEs were: • Thrombocytopenia, increased AST, hypokalemia, and anemia – Serious AEs were reported in 18.6% • 6.2% discontinued treatment due to an AE – There were 3 cases of NRH (nodular regenerative hyperplasia) and 3 patients discontinued treatment due to cardiac disorders – Four of the 9 AEs leading to death were deemed related to treatment: • Hepatic failure, hepatic function abnormal, bacterial sepsis, and metabolic encephalopathy VITAL: Phase II Randomized Trial of Lapatinib + Capecitabine or Vinorelbine in MBC • • Rationale – Lapatinib is approved for use in combination with capecitabine • Also has activity in combination with vinorelbine1-3 – Objective: • Evaluate the efficacy and safety of lapatinib when combined with either capecitabine or vinorelbine in women with HER2-positive breast cancer Study design – Phase II, open-label, multicenter study – Patients with HER2-positive MBC (N=112) – Randomized to lapatinib + capecitabine or lapatinib + vinorelbine – The primary endpoint was PFS 1Brain et al., Br J Cancer. 2012;106:673-7 et al., SABCS 2010; abstract P3-14-18 3Bisagni et al., ESMO 2010; abstract 3529 Janni et al., SABCS 2012; abstract P5-18-21 2Lu VITAL: Phase II Randomized Trial of Lapatinib + Capecitabine or Vinorelbine in MBC • Results – Baseline characteristics were well-balanced between arms – Median PFS in both arms was 6.2 months (HR 0.84, 0.53-1.35) – The most common AEs for the capecitabine-containing arm were: • Palmar-plantar erythrodysesthesia, diarrhea, and rash – The most common AEs for the vinorelbine-containing arm were: • Neutropenia, diarrhea, rash, nausea, and fatigue – More serious AEs were observed in the vinorelbine-containing arm • 33% vs. 11% Clinical Implications • The optimal duration of adjuvant trastuzumab remains 1 year • Long-term follow-up confirms the marked benefit of adjuvant trastuzumab • Pertuzumab, trastuzumab and docetaxel are a new standard for the first-line treatment of HER2+ metastatic breast cancer – Safe and effective in the older population – Reasonable to substitute weekly paclitaxel – HER2 remains the best predictive marker for benefit – Higher exposure to adjuvant trastuzumab in the US population • T-DM1 is a safe and effective therapy for metastatic HER2+ breast cancer – Approved by FDA 2/22/2013 • The best chemotherapy agent to partner with lapatinib remains capecitabine Feedback (please email your answers to [email protected]) -Was this information helpful? -Did you share this information with your colleagues? 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