| Literature DB >> 27284266 |
Joëlle Collignon1, Laurence Lousberg1, Hélène Schroeder1, Guy Jerusalem2.
Abstract
Triple-negative breast cancers (TNBCs) are defined by the absence of estrogen and progesterone receptors and the absence of HER2 overexpression. These cancers represent a heterogeneous breast cancer subtype with a poor prognosis. Few systemic treatment options exist besides the use of chemotherapy (CT). The heterogeneity of the disease has limited the successful development of targeted therapy in unselected patient populations. Currently, there are no approved targeted therapies for TNBC. However, intense research is ongoing to identify specific targets and develop additional and better systemic treatment options. Standard adjuvant and neoadjuvant regimens include anthracyclines, cyclophosphamide, and taxanes. Platinum-based CT has been proposed as another CT option of interest in TNBC. We review the role of this therapy in general, and particularly in patients carrying BRCA germ-line mutations. Available data concerning the role of platinum-based CT in TNBC were acquired primarily in the neoadjuvant setting. The routine use of platinum-based CT is not yet recommended by available guidelines. Many studies have reported the molecular characterization of TNBCs. Several actionable targets have been identified. Novel therapeutic strategies are currently being tested in clinical trials based on promising results observed in preclinical studies. These targets include androgen receptor, EGFR, PARP, FGFR, and the angiogenic pathway. We review the recent data on experimental drugs in this field. We also discuss the recent data concerning immunologic checkpoint inhibitors.Entities:
Keywords: BRCA1/2 mutation; androgen receptor; molecular subtype; platinum-based chemotherapy; targeted therapy; triple-negative breast cancer
Year: 2016 PMID: 27284266 PMCID: PMC4881925 DOI: 10.2147/BCTT.S69488
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Breast Cancer (Dove Med Press) ISSN: 1179-1314
Genomic TNBC subtypes and potential therapeutic targets
| Subtypes | Genetic abnormalities | Potential therapeutic target |
|---|---|---|
| BL1 | Cell cycle gene expression | PARP inhibitors |
| BL2 | Growth factor signaling pathways (EGFR, MET, NGF, Wnt/β-catenin, IGF-1R) | mTOR inhibitors |
| Immunomodulatory | Immune cell processes (CTLA4, IL12, IL7 pathways, antigen processing/presentation) | PD1/PDL1 inhibitors |
| Mesenchymal-like | Cell motility | mTOR inhibitors |
| Mesenchymal stem-like | Similar to M+ | PI3K inhibitors |
| Luminal androgen receptor | Androgen receptor gene | Antiandrogen therapy |
Note: Data from Lehmann et al.25
Abbreviations: BC, breast cancer; BL, basal-like; CSC, cancer stem cells; DNA, deoxyribonucleic acid; EGFR, epidermal growth factor receptor; EMT, epithelial-mesenchymal-transition; IGF-1R, insulin-like growth factor I receptor; IL, interleukin; IM, immunomodulatory; LAR, luminal androgen receptor; M, mesenchymal-like; MET, hepatocyte growth factor; mTOR, mammalian target of rapamycin; MSL, mesenchymal stem-like; NGF, nerve growth factor; PARP, poly ADP ribose polymerase; PD1, programmed cell death 1; PDL1, programmed death-ligand 1; PI3K, phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase; TNBC, triple negative breast cancer.
Carboplatin-based chemotherapy in neoadjuvant treatment: randomized Phase II results
| Phase II trials | n | Standard chemotherapy | Standard chemotherapy + carboplatin | Toxicity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 315 | pCR: 36.9% (ypT0N0) | pCR: 53.2% (ypT0N0) | Increased with carboplatin (AUC 2) | |
| 443 | pCR 41% (ypT0/TisN0) | pCR 54% (ypT0/TisN0) | Increased with carboplatin | |
| 94 | pCR 35% (ypT0N0) | pCR 30% (ypT0N0) | No difference in grade 3/4 toxicity | |
| 62 | pCR 26% (ypT0N0) | pCR 52% (ypT0N0) | More toxicity with carboplatin/veliparib | |
| 91 | pCR: 14% (ypT0/TisN0) | pCR: 38.6% (ypT0/TisN0) | No difference in grade 3/4 toxicity |
Abbreviations: AUC, area under curve; EFS, event-free survival; is, in situ; pCR, pathologic complete response; RFS, relapse-free survival; TNBC, triple-negative breast cancer.
Trials in progress in the neoadjuvant and adjuvant settings for TNBC
| Study, | Phase, design | Treatment | Primary outcome | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Neoadjuvant metronomic chemotherapy in TNBC | II | AC/carboplatin + P | pCR rates | |
| Two consequent chemotherapy regimens as induction preoperative therapy for patients with locally advanced TNBC | II | P + carboplatin/AC + capecitabine | pCR rates | |
| Personalized treatment of high-risk mammary cancer: the PETREMAC trial (personalized medicine) | II | Neoadjuvant olaparib/olaparib + carboplatin (if lack of response to olaparib alone) | Predictive and prognostic value of mutations in cancer-related genes assessed in breast cancer tissue before starting therapy | |
| Identification of BRCA1-associated DNA-repair dysfunction in patients with early TNBC treated with neoadjuvant platinum-based chemotherapy | II | Cisplatin | pCR rates | |
| Effect of neoadjuvant platinum-based chemoradiation therapy for locally advanced TNBC: clinical outcomes and correlation to biological parameters | II | Carboplatin or cisplatin + radiotherapy | CRR | |
| Impact of an additional four cycles of cisplatin in patients with TNBC not achieving clinical CR after four cycles of neoadjuvant adriamycin plus cyclophosphamide | II | Adriamycin + cyclophosphamide/cisplatin | pCR rates | |
| TBCRC030: preoperative cisplatin versus P in patients with TNBC: evaluating the homologous recombination-deficiency biomarker | II | P versus cisplatin | pCR rates | |
| 2×2 factorial trial of the addition of carboplatin ± bevacizumab to neoadjuvant weekly P followed by dose-dense AC in hormone receptor-poor/HER2-negative resectable breast cancer | II | P/AC versus | pCR rates | |
| TBCRC 031: neoadjuvant cisplatin versus doxorubicin/cyclophosphamide in women with newly diagnosed breast cancer and germ-line | II | AC versus cisplatin | pCR rates | |
| Efficacy and safety of weekly P single agent and two different regimens of the PARP1 inhibitor SAR240550 (BSI-201) in combination with weekly P as neoadjuvant therapy in patients with stage II–IIIA TNBC | II | Iniparib (different schedules and dosing) + P versus P alone | pCR rates | |
| Different neoadjuvant regimens in subtypes of breast Cancer | II | TNBC subtype: carboplatin + P versus epirubicin + P | pCR rates | |
| Pathologic complete response with the addition of carboplatin with and without veliparib to standard chemotherapy in the neoadjuvant treatment of TNBC | II | P + carboplatin/AC versus | pCR rates | |
| Predictors of response to neoadjuvant docetaxel–carboplatin chemotherapy for patients with stage II and III TNBC | II | Carboplatin–docetaxel | Predictors of response to docetaxel–carboplatin | |
| Individualized neoadjuvant chemotherapy in TNBC (neo-TN) | II/III | Platinum-based chemotherapy, but variable schedule based on HRD status and response | Average neoadjuvant response index | |
| Neoadjuvant carboplatin plus docetaxel or carboplatin plus P followed by AC in stage I–III TNBC | III | Carboplatin + docetaxel/AC versus carboplatin + P/AC | pCR rates | |
| Two dose-dense, dose-intensified approaches (ETC andPM[Cb]) for neoadjuvant treatment of patients withhigh-risk early breast cancer (GeparOcto) | III | Carboplatin + Myocet + P versus epirubicin + P + cyclophosphamide | pCR rates | |
| Safety and efficacy of the addition of veliparib pluscarboplatin versus the addition of carboplatin to standardneoadjuvant chemotherapy versus standard neoadjuvantchemotherapy in subjects with early stage TNBC | III | Veliparib + carboplatin + P followed by AC versus placebo + carboplatin + P followed by AC versus 2 placebos + P followed by AC | pCR rates | |
| Anthracyclines followed by taxane versus anthracyclinesfollowed by taxane plus carboplatin as (neo)adjuvanttherapy in patients with TNBC (PEARLY trial) | III | AC/taxol versus | 5-year EFS | |
| PARP inhibition after preoperative chemotherapy inpatients with TNBC or ER/PR+, HER2− with known | II | Cisplatin versus cisplatin + rucaparib | 2-year DFS | |
| Everolimus plus cisplatin in TNBC patients with residualdisease after standard chemotherapy (NECTAR trial) | II | Cisplatin + everolimus | Tumor response | |
| Postoperative trial of platinum-based chemotherapyversus observation in patients with residual TN basal-like breast cancer following neoadjuvant chemotherapy | III | Platinum-based chemotherapy (cisplatin or carboplatin) versus observation | IDFS | |
| Carboplatin as adjuvant chemotherapy versusobservation in TNBC with pathologic residual cancerafter neoadjuvant chemotherapy: POST-neoadjuvant study | III | Carboplatin versus observation | DFS | |
| NRG BR-003: adjuvant therapy comparing AC followedby weekly P with or without carboplatin for node-positive or high-risk node-negative triple-negativeinvasive breast cancer | II | Sequential treatment AC/P versus AC/P + carboplatin | IDFS | |
| EC followed by docetaxel given every 3 weeks, weeklyP or weekly P plus carboplatin in TNBC (TPPC) | II | 3 arms: EC/docetaxel versus | 3-year DFS | |
| Efficacy and safety of olaparib versus placebo asadjuvant treatment in patients with germ-line | III | Olaparib versus placebo | IDFS | |
Abbreviations: AC, doxorubicin + cyclophosphamide; CR, complete response; CRR, clinical response rate; DFS, disease-free survival; EC, epirubicin–cyclophosphamide; EFS, event-free survival; ETC, epirubicin–paclitaxel–cyclophosphamide; HRD, homologous recombination deficiency; IDFS, invasive DFS; PARP, poly ADP ribose polymerase; P, paclitaxel; pCR, pathologic complete response; PM(Cb), paclitaxel–Myocet (carboplatin); TNBC, triple-negative breast cancer.
Results of trials with PARP inhibitors in triple-negative breast cancer
| Study, | Phase, design | Drug | Primary objective | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pharmacokinetic and biological evaluation of a small molecule inhibitor of PARP1 (KU-0059436) in patients with advanced tumors | I | Olaparib | Safety, tolerability, dose-limiting toxicity, and maximum tolerated dose of olaparib | 60 patients |
| AZD2281 in patients with known BRCA mutation status or recurrent high-grade ovarian cancer or patients with known BRCA mutation status/TNBC | II | Olaparib 400 mg | Objective response rate (ORR) | 26 patients |
| Efficacy and safety of KU-0059436 (olaparib) given orally twice daily in patients with advanced BRCA1 or BRCA2-associated breast cancer | II | Olaparib 100 mg twice daily, 400 mg twice daily | Confirmed objective tumor response CR | 27 patients (100 mg) |
| Efficacy and safety of olaparib given orally twice daily in patients with advanced cancers who have a confirmed genetic BRCA1 and/or BRCA2 mutation | II | Olaparib 400 mg twice daily | Tumor-response rate | 62 patients |
Abbreviation: TNBC, triple-negative breast cancer.
First results with antiandrogen therapy in TNBC and studies in progress
| Study, | Phase, design | Drug | Primary outcome | Status | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bicalutamide for the treatment of AR+, ER−, PR− metastatic BC patients | II | Bicalutamide 150 mg once daily | CBR at 6 months (CR, PR, stable disease) | Closed | 26 patients CBR 19% |
| Clinical activity and safety of enzalutamide in patients with advanced, AR+ TNBC, stage 1 | II | Enzalutamide 160 mg once daily | CBR at 16 weeks (CR, PR, stable disease) | Not recruiting | 26 patients CBR16 42% |
| Clinical activity and safety of enzalutamide in patients with advanced, AR+ TNBC, stage 2 | II | Enzalutamide 160 mg once daily | CBR at 16 weeks (CR, PR, stable disease) | Not recruiting | 75 patients CBR16 35% |
| Activity of abiraterone acetate plus prednisone in patients with a molecular apocrine HER2− locally advanced or metastatic BC | II | Abiraterone acetate 160 mg once daily | CBR at 6 months (CR, PR, stable disease) | Not recruiting | Not available |
| Orteronel as monotherapy in patients with metastatic BC that expresses the AR | II | Orteronel 300 mg twice daily | Response rate at 36 months | Recruiting | Not available |
| Bicalutamide as a treatment in AR-positive metastatic triple-negative breast cancer (mTNBC) patients | II | Bicalutamide 150 mg once daily | CBR | Recruiting | Not available |
| AR inhibitor bicalutamide in treating patients with TNBC | II | Bicalutamide 150 mg once daily | CBR | Recruiting | Not available |
| Efficacy and safety of GTx-024 in patients with AR+ TNBC | II | GTx-024 18 mg once daily | CBR | Recruiting | Not available |
| Safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, and efficacy of VT-464 in patients with advanced BC | I/II | VT-464 once daily | Phase I: maximum tolerated dose Phase II: CBR16 and CBR24 for patients with AR+ TNBC | Recruiting | Not available |
Abbreviations: BC, breast cancer; CBR, clinical benefit rate; CBR16, clinical benefit rate at 16; CBR24, clinical benefit rate at 24; CR, complete response; mTNBC, metastatic triple-negative breast cancer; PFS, progression-free survival; PR, partial response; TNBC, triple-negative breast cancer; AR, androgen receptor; ER, estrogen receptor; HER2, human epidermal growth factor receptor 2; PR-, progesterone receptor negative.
Immunotherapy trials in breast cancer
| Study, | Phase, design | Drug | Primary outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| MEDI4736 (anti-PDL1 antibody) concomitant with weekly Nab-paclitaxel and dose-dense doxorubicin–cyclophosphamide chemotherapy for clinical stage I–III TNBC | Phase I/II | Anti-PDL1 (MEDI4736) concomitant with Nab-paclitaxel and doxorubicin + cyclophosphamide | pCR |
| Triple-negative first-line study: neoadjuvant trial of Nab-paclitaxel and MPDL3280A, a PDL1 inhibitor, in patients with TNBC | Phase II | Anti-PDL1 (MPDL3280A) in combination with Nab-paclitaxel | pCR |
| Safety and clinical activity of pembrolizumab (MK-3475) in combination with chemotherapy as neoadjuvant treatment for TNBC | Phase I | Anti-PD1 (MK-3475, pembrolizumab) + chemotherapy versus MK-3475 + chemotherapy + carboplatin | DLT, pCR |
| Single-agent pembrolizumab (MK-3475) versus single-agent chemotherapy as per physician’s choice for metastatic TNBC | Phase III | Anti-PD1 (MK-3475, pembrolizumab) versus chemotherapy | PFS |
| Pembrolizumab (MK-3475) as monotherapy for metastatic TNBC | Phase II | Anti-PD1 (MK-3475, pembrolizumab) monotherapy | ORR safety |
| Nivolumab after induction treatment in TNBC patients: TONIC trial | Phase II | Anti-PD1 (nivolumab) after induction treatment (four arms: radiotherapy, doxorubicin, cisplatin, cyclophosphamide) or noninduction treatment | PFS |
| Atezolizumab (MPDL3280A) (anti-PDL1 antibody) in combination with Nab-paclitaxel compared with placebo with Nab-paclitaxel for patients with previously untreated metastatic TNBC | Phase III | Anti-PDL1 (MPDL3280A, atezolizumab) with Nab-paclitaxel compared with placebo and Nab-paclitaxel | PFS |
| Tremelimumab monotherapy in patients with advanced solid tumors | Phase | Anti-CTLA4 (tremelimumab) monotherapy with the option to be sequenced to MEDI4736 monotherapy or MEDI4736 + tremelimumab after progressive disease | ORR |
| Safety and efficacy of PDR001 administered to patients with advanced malignancies | Phase I/II | Anti-PD1 (PDR001) monotherapy | Maximum tolerated dose Safety |
| Immuno-PET imaging with 89Zr-MPDL3280A in patients with locally advanced or metastatic non-small cell lung cancer, bladder cancer, or TNBC prior to MPDL3280A treatment | Phase I | 89Zr-MPDL380A (anti-PDL1) | Description of 89Zr-MPDL380A PK by measuring SUV on the 89Zr-MPDL380A-PET scans → to evaluate the uptake of the tracer in tumor lesions and its use as a complementary tool for patient selection |
| MPDL3280A treatment in patients with locally advanced or metastatic non-small cell lung, bladder, and TNBC after investigational imaging | Phase II | Anti-PDL1 (MPDL380A) | ORR and efficacy |
| Safety and pharmacokineticsof MPDL3280A administeredintravenously as a single agent topatients with locally advanced ormetastatic solid tumors or hematologicmalignancies | Phase I | Anti-PDL1 (MPDL3280A) | Incidence and nature of DLT |
| Neoadjuvant study with the PDL1-directed antibody in locally advancedTNBC undergoing treatment withNab-paclitaxel and carboplatin | Phase III | Carboplatin, Nab-paclitaxel, atezolizumab (MPDL3280A, anti-PDL1), anthracycline versus carboplatin, Nab-paclitaxel, and anthracycline | Event-free survival |
Abbreviations: DLT, dose-limiting toxicity; Nab, nanoparticle albumin-bound; ORR, objective response rate; OS, overall survival; pCR, pathologic complete response; PFS, progression-free survival; SUV, standardized uptake value; PK, pharmacokinetic; TNBC, triple-negative breast cancer; CTLA4, cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein 4; PD1, programmed cell death 1; PDL1, programmed death-ligand 1.