| Literature DB >> 25001612 |
Carey Anders1, Allison M Deal, Vandana Abramson, Minetta C Liu, Anna M Storniolo, John T Carpenter, Shannon Puhalla, Rita Nanda, Amal Melhem-Bertrandt, Nancy U Lin, P Kelly Marcom, Catherine Van Poznak, Vered Stearns, Michelle Melisko, J Keith Smith, Olga Karginova, Joel Parker, Jonathan Berg, Eric P Winer, Amy Peterman, Aleix Prat, Charles M Perou, Antonio C Wolff, Lisa A Carey.
Abstract
Nearly half of patients with advanced triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) develop brain metastases (BM) and most will also have uncontrolled extracranial disease. This study evaluated the safety and efficacy of iniparib, a small molecule anti-cancer agent that alters reactive oxygen species tumor metabolism and penetrates the blood brain barrier, with the topoisomerase I inhibitor irinotecan in patients with TNBC-BM. Eligible patients had TNBC with new or progressive BM and received irinotecan and iniparib every 3 weeks. Time to progression (TTP) was the primary end point; secondary endpoints were response rate (RR), clinical benefit rate (CBR), overall survival (OS), toxicity, and health-related quality of life. Correlative endpoints included molecular subtyping and gene expression studies on pre-treatment archival tissues, and determination of germline BRCA1/2 status. Thirty-seven patients began treatment; 34 were evaluable for efficacy. Five of 24 patients were known to carry a BRCA germline mutation (4 BRCA1, 1 BRCA2). Median TTP was 2.14 months and median OS was 7.8 months. Intracranial RR was 12 %, while intracranial CBR was 27 %. Treatment was well-tolerated; the most common grade 3/4 adverse events were neutropenia and fatigue. Grade 3/4 diarrhea was rare (3 %). Intrinsic subtyping revealed 19 of 21 tumors (79 %) were basal-like, and intracranial response was associated with high expression of proliferation-related genes. This study suggests a modest benefit of irinotecan plus iniparib in progressive TNBC-BM. More importantly, this trial design is feasible and lays the foundation for additional studies for this treatment-refractory disease.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25001612 PMCID: PMC4112043 DOI: 10.1007/s10549-014-3039-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Breast Cancer Res Treat ISSN: 0167-6806 Impact factor: 4.872
Demographics and patient characteristics
| Patient demographics ( | No. |
|---|---|
| Median age (years; range) | 47 (34–80) |
| Race | |
| White | 33 (89 %) |
| Black | 4 (11 %) |
|
| |
| Mutated (4 | 5 (21 %) |
| Stage at breast cancer diagnosis | |
| I | 8 (22 %) |
| II | 20 (56 %) |
| III | 6 (17 %) |
| IV | 2 (6 %) |
| Disease status | |
| Median Time since first diagnosis of metastatic breast cancer (range) | 1.1 years (0.08–7.27 years) |
| Median Time since first diagnosis of brain metastases (range) | 0.65 years (0.04–4.01 years) |
| CNS as a site at first distant recurrence | 16 (43 %) |
| Extracranial disease at enrollment | 26 (70 %) |
| Prior systemic chemotherapy | |
| (Neo)-adjuvant | 32 (87 %) |
| Metastatic | 25 (68 %) |
| Prior Metastatic lines, # (range) | 1 (0–14) |
| Prior Iniparib | 5 (14 %) |
| Prior cranial radiotherapy | |
| Cohort 1 (prior cranial radiation) | 31 (84 %) |
| WBRT | 13 (42 %) |
| Radiosurgery | 7 (23 %) |
| Both WBRT and Radiosurgery | 11 (36 %) |
| Cohort 2 (radiation therapy naïve) | 6 (16 %) |
| Prior neurosurgery | 10 (27 %) |
| Recursive partitioning analysis (RPA) score | |
| 1 | 7 (19 %) |
| 2 | 22 (59 %) |
| 3 | 8 (22 %) |
| Baseline Abnormal Neurologic exam | 16 (43 %) |
| Steroid use at baseline | 23 (62 %) |
| Iniparib dose | |
| 5.6 mg/kg | 23 (62 %) |
| 8 mg/kg | 9 (24 %) |
| Both | 5 (14 %) |
Fig. 1Most prevalent toxicities (All grades) in response to irinotecan and iniparib therapy. Grade 1 and 2 toxicities are presented in blue; Grade 3–5 toxicities are presented in red
Fig. 2a Median time to progression (TTP) and b median overall survival (OS) in response to irinotecan and iniparib among patients with progressive or new brain metastases arising from triple negative breast cancer
Summary of objective response rates
| Intracranial ( | Extracranial ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Complete response | 0 | 0 |
| Partial response | 4 (12 %) | 1 (5 %) |
| Stable disease | 13 (41 %) | 6 (32 %) |
| Progressive disease | 15 (47 %) | 12 (63 %) |
| Clinical benefit rate (CR or PR + SD > 6 months) | 9 (27 %) | 2 (11 %) |
a n = 2 pts did not have an end of treatment brain MRI as they progressed extracranially in <6 months. Both were classified as intracranial “No Clinical Benefit” and extracranial PD
Fig. 3Best percentage of CNS volumetric change from baseline. Response criteria defined by modified RECIST: Red progressive disease (PD), gold stable disease (SD) <6 months, green SD >6 months, blue partial response (PR). BRCA mutation status indicated as follows: (+) BRCA mutation carrier, (−) wild-type BRCA, () unknown
Fig. 4Correlations between intracranial response rates, BRCA mutation status, intrinsic breast cancer subtype call, ROR-P (risk of recurrence-proliferation), proliferation and VEGF-13 gene signatures. High signature expression is represented by red, medium by black and low by green. Asterisk denotes a statistically significant association