Diana Lüftner1, Gary H Lyman2, João Gonçalves3, Xavier Pivot4, Minji Seo5. 1. Department of Hematology, Oncology and Tumor Immunology, Charité Campus Benjamin Franklin, Charité University Medicine Berlin, Hindenburgdamm 30, 12200, Berlin, Germany. diana.lueftner@charite.de. 2. Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, WA, USA. 3. iMed, Faculdade Farmacia da Universidade Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal. 4. Centre Paul Strauss, Strasbourg, France. 5. Samsung Bioepis Co., Ltd., Incheon, Republic of Korea.
Abstract
SB3 is a biosimilar of trastuzumab that has been approved for use in the treatment of human epidermal growth factor 2-positive breast cancer and human epidermal growth factor 2-positive gastric cancer. Antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity is one of several critical quality attributes of trastuzumab. Data from the development of SB3 support the hypothesis of a relationship between antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity activity and clinical outcomes in terms of the response rate and long-term survival. Current analytic methods utilizing advanced technology allow the detection of small changes in other quality attributes that influence antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity, such as glycosylation and FcγRIIIa binding. Use of such methods to monitor batch-to-batch consistency enables production of trastuzumab biosimilars with consistent quality. Trastuzumab biosimilars such as SB3 therefore have the potential to increase accessibility to trastuzumab-based therapy without compromising efficacy or safety.
SB3 is a biosimilar of trastuzumab that has been approved for use in the treatment of human epidermal growth factor 2-positive breast cancer and human epidermal growth factor 2-positive gastric cancer. Antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity is one of several critical quality attributes of trastuzumab. Data from the development of SB3 support the hypothesis of a relationship between antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity activity and clinical outcomes in terms of the response rate and long-term survival. Current analytic methods utilizing advanced technology allow the detection of small changes in other quality attributes that influence antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity, such as glycosylation and FcγRIIIa binding. Use of such methods to monitor batch-to-batch consistency enables production of trastuzumab biosimilars with consistent quality. Trastuzumab biosimilars such as SB3 therefore have the potential to increase accessibility to trastuzumab-based therapy without compromising efficacy or safety.
Biologic drugs targeting human epidermal growth factor 2 (HER2), such as
the anti-HER2 monoclonal antibody trastuzumab, have revolutionized the treatment of
HER2-positive (HER2 +) breast cancer [1].
Trastuzumab-containing regimens are the standard of care for patients with early or
metastatic HER2 + breast cancer and have considerably improved outcomes in these
indications [2-6]. However, biologic
drugs like trastuzumab are also expensive and account for much of the rising cost of
cancer care [7, 8], placing enormous financial pressure on healthcare
budgets and patients. Moreover, cost alone may prohibit access to biologic therapy,
meaning that not all patients with HER2 + breast cancer receive trastuzumab as indicated
with devastating consequences [9-11].Patents for the trastuzumab reference product recently expired in the
European Union (EU) and USA (2014 and 2019, respectively) [12], and several trastuzumab biosimilars have been
approved for use in the treatment of HER2 + breast cancer, including SB3 (Ontruzant;
Samsung Bioepis), PF-05280014 (Trazimera; Pfizer), MYL-1401O (Ogivri; Mylan), CT-P6
(Herzuma; Celltrion), and ABP 980 (Kanjinti; Amgen) [13-15]. These lower cost trastuzumab biosimilars, which are now being
integrated into the latest European and North American breast cancer clinical practice
guidelines [3, 6], have the potential to help contain rising healthcare expenditure
and provide sustainable access to trastuzumab-based therapies in breast cancer care
[10, 13, 16–19]. However, this may
be undermined if oncologists are unsure of the quality of trastuzumab biosimilars and
are reluctant to use them [7, 16]. Unlike chemically synthesized small-molecule
medicines, which can be easily characterized and identically copied as generic drugs,
biologic drugs are structurally complex, intrinsically variable molecules produced in
living systems using complex manufacturing processes, and cannot be identically
replicated [20-22]. A biosimilar is a
biologic drug containing a similar version of the active substance of an already
approved reference product with no clinically meaningful differences in quality, safety,
or efficacy relative to the reference biologic drug [23-25]. The quality profiles of biosimilar and reference biologic drugs
depend on physicochemical and functional critical quality attributes (CQAs).In contrast to generic medications, for which European Medicines Agency and
US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval is mainly based on the demonstration of
bioequivalence with the original product in pharmacokinetic studies, the approval of
biosimilars is a highly regulated and a uniquely detailed process [13, 20,
21, 26]. Biosimilars undergo a rigorous comprehensive comparability
exercise that involves a step-wise approach to building a body of evidence (the totality
of evidence) demonstrating biosimilarity with the reference product. Compared with the
development process for reference products, there is more emphasis on the
characterization of biosimilars in relation to quality, and less emphasis on clinical
testing [21, 23, 25]. As is the case
for all biologic drugs, once a biosimilar is approved, collection of post-marketing data
and a risk management plan are required for pharmacovigilance purposes [16, 17,
21, 25]. Quality data that may affect the clinical safety and efficacy of
trastuzumab (reference product and biosimilars) in patients with HER2 + breast cancer
are reviewed in this article. In relation to this, we discuss the first published
clinical results to support the hypothesis of a relationship between quality drifts in
the trastuzumab reference product and long-term outcomes in patients with HER2 + breast
cancer [27]. These results were observed
during the development of the first European Medicines Agency-approved trastuzumab
biosimilar, SB3.
Importance of Biologics Quality in Clinical Practice
The quality profiles of biosimilar and reference biologic drugs depend on
quality attributes (QAs), which are the physicochemical and functional characteristics
of a biologic drug that might affect its clinical profile [26]. Critical quality attributes are the foundation
of the quality-by-design approach to drug development, which is dependent on a thorough
understanding of the relationship between CQAs and the immunogenicity, safety,
pharmacokinetics, and efficacy of the product [28, 29].To guarantee consistent clinical performance, the quality profiles of
approved biologic products must be consistently maintained, but biologics are inherently
variable and all will demonstrate some degree of variability [28, 30].
Biologic drugs are also highly sensitive to changes in manufacturing conditions, thus
even minor modifications to the manufacturing process can lead to drifts in QAs and add
to variability [30-32]. Variations in QAs
among different batches of the marketed biologic drugs etanercept and rituximab have
been historically reported, including changes in the glycosylation profile of both
products and the antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) activity of rituximab
[33]. The size and abrupt nature of
these changes suggest that they were a result of changes in manufacturing processes such
as the production cell line, growth conditions and/or purification sequence, all of
which influence the glycosylation profile [33].Changes in biologic drug manufacturing processes are a common occurrence
[34]. For example, the trastuzumab
reference product has had more than 25 changes in manufacturing since its approval in
the EU in 2000 [34]. In accordance with
good pharmacovigilance practice, comparability exercises for pre- and post-change
products must be performed to provide analytical evidence that differences in QAs
introduced by manufacturing changes will not adversely impact the drug’s clinical
profile [31, 34].
Trastuzumab Quality Attributes
At the time of development of SB3, product-specific QAs were organized
into three tiers for statistical testing purposes as outlined by the FDA
[23, 26]; this FDA guideline was withdrawn in 2018 [35]. Critical quality attributes were divided into
tiers based on a criticality risk assessment of their impact on immunogenicity,
safety, pharmacokinetics, and efficacy [26, 36]. High- and
moderate-impact CQAs assessed using analytical methods amenable to statistical
testing were assigned to tier 1 analysis (equivalence testing) and tier 2 analysis
(quality range analysis), respectively [26, 36]. Low-impact
QAs or QAs assessed using analytical methods not considered amenable to statistical
analysis were assigned to a tier 3 analysis (comparison of raw data or graphical
presentation of results) [26,
36]. Inhibition of cell proliferation
and ADCC represent the major mechanisms of action of trastuzumab, with
anti-proliferation activity mediated by binding of the trastuzumabFab region to
HER2, and ADCC activity mediated by the binding of the Fc region to Fcγ receptors
(FcγRs) on immune effector cells [30,
37–39].
Anti-proliferation and ADCC activities were classified as tier 1 QAs for SB3
[36, 38]. Tier 2 QAs included HER2 binding, FcγRIIIa binding, and the
sum level of afucose plus high mannose, which are glycoforms that have an influence
on FcγRIIIa binding and ADCC activity [30, 36, 38]. Tier 3 QAs included FcγRIa, FcγRIIa, FcγRIIb,
and FcγRIIb binding, in vitro angiogenesis, and surface HER2 expression [36].To ensure that there are no clinically meaningful differences between
the biosimilar and the reference product, CQAs must be within a pre-specified target
range that accounts for expected batch-to-batch variability and is representative of
the reference product [26, 28, 40]. For example, the equivalence margin for equivalence testing of
SB3 tier 1 QAs was based on 1.5 times the variability of trastuzumab reference
product lots [36]. Once approved, it is
particularly important that the QAs related to the mechanism of action are
consistently maintained over time. Therefore, CQAs such as the HER2-binding assay,
anti-proliferation assay, and FcγRIIIa binding assay were included as part of the
release specification throughout the product life cycle of SB3 in the USA
[36].
Trastuzumab Reference Product Quality Drifts
As part of the biosimilar development process, the physicochemical and
functional properties of different batches of the reference product should be
monitored frequently over a long-term period so that unintended patterns of change in
CQAs can be detected and an accurate quality target range based on non-drifted
batches can be established [30,
38, 40]. SB3 was developed based on an in-depth understanding of
trastuzumab QAs obtained by analyzing up to 154 lots of EU- and US-sourced
trastuzumab reference products for up to 8 years using standard and the latest
state-of-the-art analytic techniques, including fluorescence resonance energy
transfer to assess HER2 binding, Alphascreen™ technology to assess Fc-related
biologic activity, and a hydrophilic interaction liquid
chromatography-ultra-performance liquid chromatography system for analysis of
glycosylation [30, 38]. In relation to glycosylation (determined by
hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography-ultra-performance liquid
chromatography), FcγRIIIa binding (assessed using Alphascreen™), and ADCC activity
(assessed in the HER2-overexpressing humanbreast cancer cell line SKBR3 using a
CytoTox-Glo® kit), two periods of drift were observed
for batches of trastuzumab reference product with expiry dates ranging from mid-2018
to December 2019, as reported by Kim et al. and Lee et al. (Fig. 1) [30,
38]. A marked downward drift in
%afucose plus %high mannose, FcγRIIIa binding activity, and ADCC activity during
the first drift period was followed by an upward drift in the second drift period
[30], with these CQAs returning to
pre-change levels in the more recently monitored lots [30, 38]. There was no
change in the antiproliferative activity of the trastuzumab reference product, which
was assessed using CellTiter-Blue® or BrdU proliferation
assay to indicate cell viability in the HER2-overexpressing humanbreast cancer cell
line BT474 [30, 38]. Overall, relative ADCC activity was
correlated with the sum of %afucose plus %high-mannose [38]. Drifted lots of the trastuzumab reference
product were not included in the CQA target ranges for SB3, and the SB3 used in
clinical trials was similar to the pre-drift trastuzumab reference product
[38, 41].
Fig. 1
Changes in a %Afucose plus
%high mannose, b FcγRIIIa binding, andc antibody-dependent cell-mediated
cytotoxicity (ADCC) activity for multiple lots of European Union (EU)-
and US-sourced trastuzumab reference product expiring between March 2015
and December 2019 [30].
Adapted from Kim et al. (2017) (Fig. 1c) and 711 (Fig. 5a, b). RP reference product
Changes in a %Afucose plus
%high mannose, b FcγRIIIa binding, andc antibody-dependent cell-mediated
cytotoxicity (ADCC) activity for multiple lots of European Union (EU)-
and US-sourced trastuzumab reference product expiring between March 2015
and December 2019 [30].Adapted from Kim et al. (2017) (Fig. 1c) and 711 (Fig. 5a, b). RP reference productConsidering that ADCC is one of the main mechanisms of action of
trastuzumab, the drift in ADCC activity observed with the trastuzumab reference
product may potentially have an impact on clinical efficacy [30, 38, 42]. This was
suggested in phase III equivalence studies of SB3 and ABP 980, which were conducted
by Pivot et al. and von Minckwitz et al., respectively, in patients with HER2 + early
breast cancer using the trastuzumab reference product sourced from a combination of
batches with expiry dates within and outside the drift period [41-44]. In these studies, the upper limits of the
confidence intervals (CIs) for pathological complete response (pCR) primary endpoints
for neoadjuvant SB3 and ABP 980 vs the trastuzumab reference product exceeded
predefined equivalence margins, meaning that potential superiority could not be ruled
out [41, 44].In the SB3 and the ABP 980 equivalence studies, equivalence was
assessed on the basis of the risk ratio and risk difference of pCR [41, 44]. The primary pCR endpoint was defined as the absence of
histologic evidence of residual invasive tumor cells in the breast (bpCR) in the SB3
study [41], and as the total pCR (tpCR)
in the breast tissue and axillary lymph nodes in the ABP 980 study [44]. Total pCR was included as a secondary
endpoint in the SB3 study, and bpCR was included as a secondary endpoint in the ABP
980 study. In both studies, the primary pCR analysis was based on local laboratory
findings, but the ABP 980 study was the first large, international, multicenter
neoadjuvant breast cancer study to conduct a sensitivity analysis based on a central
independent laboratory review of tumor samples, which has the potential to reduce
inter-pathologist variability [41,
44–46]. In the SB3
study, the risk difference was 10.70% (95% CI 4.13–17.26), with a lower upper
boundary of the 95% CI within the predefined equivalence margin of ± 13%, and the
upper boundary exceeding it, demonstrating non-inferiority but not non-superiority
[41]. The bpCR ratio of 1.259 (90% CI
1.112–1.426) was, however, within the predefined 90% CI equivalence margin
(0.785–1.546), demonstrating equivalent efficacy [47]. Based on a local laboratory review of tumor samples in the ABP
980 study, the upper bounds of the 90% CI for the tpCR risk difference (7.3%; 90% CI
1.2–13.4) and risk ratio (1.88; 90% CI 1.033–1.366) exceeded the predefined 90% CI
equivalence margins of ± 13% and 0.759–1.318, respectively [44]. However, the tpCR risk difference (5.8; 90%
CI 0.5 to 12.0) and risk ratio (1.142; 90% CI 0.993–1.312) obtained after central
review of tumor samples were contained within the predefined equivalence margins,
indicating similar efficacy [44].A proposed biosimilar cannot be superior to its reference product
[23, 40, 46], but in the
ABP 980 and SB3 phase III equivalence studies, it was observed that pCR rates were
lower in patients treated with drifted batches of the trastuzumab reference product
than those treated with the pre-drifted trastuzumab reference product or biosimilar
trastuzumab [42, 43]. As described in European Public Assessment
Reports for SB3 and ABP 980 [42,
43], it has been acknowledged that
the downward drifts in ADCC activity in some of the trastuzumab reference product
batches used in these studies could have at least partially confounded the results by
contributing to the observed differences in pCR rates between treatment arms and
their relatively high upper CI limits [13, 15]. Taking
totality of evidence into account, SB3 and ABP 980 were therefore considered
comparable, rather than superior, to the reference product, and approved as
biosimilars of trastuzumab [15,
42, 43, 45].
Confirming Biosimilarity of SB3 Based on Clinical Evidence
There are generally two clinical steps involved in the development of
biosimilars: a phase I pharmacokinetic equivalence study in healthy volunteers followed
by a pivotal phase III clinical equivalence study in an appropriate patient population
[13, 23, 25]. Clinical studies
of potential biosimilars are designed to detect clinically meaningful differences
between the biosimilar and the reference product [21, 23, 25]. As well as being assessed during the pivotal
clinical efficacy study, clinical safety and immunogenicity are initially assessed
during clinical pharmacokinetic studies [23, 25].
Phase I Studies
The primary aim of the phase I study is to demonstrate pharmacokinetic
equivalence of a biosimilar candidate and its reference product, usually in healthy
volunteers [13, 25]. Compared with patients who may have
disease-related factors and take concomitant medications that influence
pharmacokinetic profiles, healthy volunteers represent a relatively homogenous group
in which to detect clinically meaningful drug-related pharmacokinetic differences
between the biosimilar and reference products [13, 25]. Although a
single-dose crossover study design can reduce pharmacokinetic variability, a parallel
study design is most appropriate for monoclonal antibodies with long half-lives
because of the risk of immune response after repeated exposures. [13, 25].Pharmacokinetic equivalence was observed for SB3 and US- and EU-sourced
trastuzumab reference products in a randomized, parallel, single-dose pharmacokinetic
study in 108 healthy male volunteers, with 90% CIs for the primary area under the
curve and maximum concentration pharmacokinetic parameters falling within the
pre-specified 0.8–1.25 equivalence margin [48]. In addition, a pharmacokinetic analysis was performed as a
secondary endpoint in a subset of patients with HER2 + breast cancer in the phase III
clinical study comparing SB3 and the trastuzumab reference product. Mean trough
concentration profiles were similar and within predefined equivalence margins in
cycles 3–8 for SB3 and for the trastuzumab reference product [41].
Phase III Studies
The aim of phase III biosimilarity clinical trials is not to
independently establish safety and efficacy of the biosimilar, which has already been
established in clinical trials conducted with the reference product, but to
demonstrate comparable clinical performance of the biosimilar in relation to the
reference product and to resolve residual uncertainty [21, 25, 26]. The statistical design, patient population,
and primary endpoints of the study are therefore selected to facilitate the detection
of differences between the two products [21, 23, 25]. In general, a phase III equivalence design
with a pre-specified equivalence margin is recommended to rule out inferiority or
superiority of the biosimilar candidate to its reference product in the most
sensitive and homogenous patient population possible using practical and sensitive
endpoints [23, 25, 49]. A recommended approach for deriving equivalence margins relies
on preserving 50‒60% of the reference treatment effect based on major historic
studies [50, 51].Phase III studies of trastuzumab biosimilar candidates are often
conducted in patients with early breast cancer, which, compared with metastatic
disease, represents a relatively homogenous population with fewer confounding
factors, such as metastatic burden and previous therapies, to influence efficacy and
safety evaluations [13, 22, 49]. Long-term survival endpoints, which are the preferred primary
efficacy endpoints in cancer indications, may not be feasible or sufficiently
sensitive to demonstrate comparability, thus shorter term surrogate endpoints can be
used, including pCR, which is correlated with long-term survival in the neoadjuvant
breast cancer setting [13, 22, 47, 49, 52, 53]. Pathological complete response may be assessed as bpCR or
tpCR. Although tpCR has a stronger correlation with long-term survival, bpCR avoids
confounding factors related to axillary lymph node status and assessment
[41, 50]. Initial use of a surrogate endpoint like pCR does not obviate
the need to assess survival during a longer term follow-up [13, 22].As previously mentioned in this review, a large randomized double-blind
study of SB3 vs the trastuzumab reference product was conducted in women with early
or locally advanced HER2 + breast cancer (n = 875)
using bpCR assessed after neoadjuvant treatment as the primary endpoint [41]. In relation to predefined equivalence
margins, the 10.7% risk difference in bpCR rates observed in this equivalence study
(51.7% with SB3 and 42.0% with the trastuzumab reference product) ruled out
inferiority but not superiority of SB3, whereas the risk ratio of bpCR rates
demonstrated equivalence. After surgery, patients received adjuvant treatment with
SB3 or the trastuzumab reference product to complete 1 year of treatment
[41]. Event-free survival (EFS) was
included as a secondary endpoint [41].
After completion of neoadjuvant and adjuvant therapy, Pivot et al. reported that
there was no difference in EFS between SB3 and the trastuzumab reference product and
bpCR and tpCR were shown to be significantly related to EFS, supporting their
validity as surrogate markers for survival [47]. Safety profiles of SB3 and the trastuzumab reference product
were similar throughout the study, with no unexpected safety issues, and the overall
incidence of anti-drug antibody was low (0.7%) [41, 47].
SB3 Extension Study
A 5-year treatment-free extension of the phase III study is ongoing to
assess the cardiac safety of SB3 (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02771795)
[27], reflecting a cautious
pharmacovigilance approach. In addition to cardiac and other safety outcomes, EFS and
overall survival (OS) are being assessed. Demographic and baseline disease
characteristics of patients participating in the extension study (n = 367) reflect the composition of the main study, with
no apparent differences between the SB3 and trastuzumab reference product treatment
arms [27, 41]. Patients in the extension study had no symptomatic cardiac
events during the main study and had no early breast cancer recurrence during
adjuvant therapy [27]. Pivot et al. have
reported 3-year follow-up data from the extension study [27]. During the 3-year follow-up after the
completion of adjuvant treatment, cardiac events were very rare [27]. Asymptomatic significant decreases in left
ventricular ejection fraction were reported in one (0.5%) patient treated with SB3
and two (1.1%) patients treated with the trastuzumab reference product [27]. No other cardiac-related events were reported
[27]. Unlike the comparable EFS rates
obtained in the two treatment arms at the end of the main study [44], the 3-year EFS rate was higher with SB3
(91.9%) than with the trastuzumab reference product (85.2%), with events occurring in
17 (9.1%) and 31 (17.1%) patients, respectively, resulting in a hazard ratio of 0.47
(95% CI 0.26‒0.87) [27]. The 3-year OS
rate was 97.0% with SB3 and 92.9% with the trastuzumab reference product
[27].Pivot et al. performed a post hoc analysis of the 3-year follow-up data
from the extension study to identify factors contributing to the surprising
difference in EFS observed between the SB3 and trastuzumab reference product
treatment arms [27]. Among the
covariates analyzed, ADCC activity and bpCR (or tpCR) were the only factors
associated with EFS (Fig. 2) [27]. Antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity
activity was designated according to whether patients treated with the trastuzumab
reference product were exposed to a trastuzumab lot with drifted ADCC activity during
neoadjuvant treatment (n = 126 and 55,
respectively) [27]. Among the 25 lots of
trastuzumab reference product used during the neoadjuvant period in the main study,
the ADCC activities of 12 lots were analyzed directly [27]. Antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity activity for the
remaining 13 lots was assumed based on their expiry dates and drifts in ADCC activity
previously reported by Kim et al. [30],
thus lots with expiry dates from August 2018 to December 2019 were assumed to have
drifted ADCC activity [27]. Overall, 13
trastuzumab reference product lots were classified as having a drift in ADCC activity
(eight based on available analyses and five based on expiry dates), and the remainder
12 lots were considered to have non-drifted ADCC activity (four based on available
analysis and eight based on expiry dates) [27]. There was insufficient power to test the hypothesis of a
relationship between ADCC activity and EFS, but the 3-year EFS rate was higher in
patients not exposed to the drifted trastuzumab reference product (92.7%) than in
those exposed to the drifted product (81.7%), whereas, as a result of comparable
events rates (hazard ratio 0.93; 95% CI, 0.31‒2.85), EFS curves for SB3 and the
non-drifted trastuzumab reference product appeared superimposable (Fig. 3) [27].
Similar trends were observed for OS, but a longer follow-up is required to analyze
the effect of ADCC status on OS [27].
Fig. 2
Factors influencing event-free survival (using breast pathologic
complete response [bpCR] status as a covariate) in patients with human
epidermal growth factor 2-positive breast cancer randomized to
neoadjuvant plus the adjuvant trastuzumab reference product (TRZ)- or
SB3-based therapy during a phase III study and followed for 3 years
thereafter during an extension study [27]. Adapted from Pivot et al. (2019) (Fig. 4a).
Drifted = patients who were exposed to at least one vial from a drifted
TRZ lot during the neoadjuvant period. Non-drifted = patients who were
never exposed to any vials from a drifted TRZ lot during the neoadjuvant
period. Positive = estrogen receptor and/or progesterone receptor
positive. Negative = estrogen receptor and progesterone receptor
negative. ADCC antibody-dependent
cell-mediated cytotoxicity, CI
confidence interval, HR hazard
ratio
Fig. 3
Kaplan–Meier curve for event-free survival for SB3, non-drifted
trastuzumab reference product (TRZ), and drifted TRZ in patients with
human epidermal growth factor 2-positive breast cancer randomized to
neoadjuvant plus adjuvant TRZ- or SB3-based therapy during a phase III
study and followed for 3 years thereafter during an extension study
[27]. Adapted from Pivot
et al. (2019) (Fig. 3a). Non-drifted TRZ = patients who were never
exposed to any vials from a drifted TRZ lot during the neoadjuvant
period. Drifted TRZ = patients who were exposed to at least one vial from
a drifted TRZ lot during the neoadjuvant period. CI confidence interval, HR hazard ratio
Factors influencing event-free survival (using breast pathologic
complete response [bpCR] status as a covariate) in patients with human
epidermal growth factor 2-positive breast cancer randomized to
neoadjuvant plus the adjuvant trastuzumab reference product (TRZ)- or
SB3-based therapy during a phase III study and followed for 3 years
thereafter during an extension study [27]. Adapted from Pivot et al. (2019) (Fig. 4a).
Drifted = patients who were exposed to at least one vial from a drifted
TRZ lot during the neoadjuvant period. Non-drifted = patients who were
never exposed to any vials from a drifted TRZ lot during the neoadjuvant
period. Positive = estrogen receptor and/or progesterone receptor
positive. Negative = estrogen receptor and progesterone receptor
negative. ADCC antibody-dependent
cell-mediated cytotoxicity, CI
confidence interval, HR hazard
ratioKaplan–Meier curve for event-free survival for SB3, non-drifted
trastuzumab reference product (TRZ), and drifted TRZ in patients with
human epidermal growth factor 2-positive breast cancer randomized to
neoadjuvant plus adjuvant TRZ- or SB3-based therapy during a phase III
study and followed for 3 years thereafter during an extension study
[27]. Adapted from Pivot
et al. (2019) (Fig. 3a). Non-drifted TRZ = patients who were never
exposed to any vials from a drifted TRZ lot during the neoadjuvant
period. Drifted TRZ = patients who were exposed to at least one vial from
a drifted TRZ lot during the neoadjuvant period. CI confidence interval, HR hazard ratio
Conclusions
Technology has advanced enormously since the first approval of the
original trastuzumab product over 20 years ago, with current analytic methods allowing
the detection of small changes in QAs such as FcγRIIIa binding and glycosylation and
enabling sensitive monitoring of batch-to-batch consistency [30, 38,
54]. This is very important as small
changes in FcγRIIIa binding and the level of fucose and mannose affect trastuzumab ADCC
activity and potentially impact clinical outcomes, including long-term survival.
Biosimilar companies are at the forefront of technology and are therefore able to
produce trastuzumab biosimilars at the most technologically advanced capacity, with CQAs
that are consistently within target range. Going forward, all drug companies
manufacturing biosimilar or reference biologic drugs should release frequent quality
data to assure that efficacy and safety demonstrated in clinical trials will be
maintained in clinical practice.Based on the totality of the evidence, which includes sophisticated
analytic and clinical assessments, approved biosimilars of trastuzumab, such as SB3,
have the potential to increase accessibility to trastuzumab-based therapy without
compromising efficacy or safety [13,
15, 27, 30, 38, 41,
44]. Furthermore, although the phase III
study of SB3 in patients with early HER2 + breast cancer was not designed to detect a
relationship between ADCC and clinical outcomes, and survival results by exposure to
ADCC drift were derived from a post hoc analysis, the SB3 development process has
provided some evidence to support the hypothesis of a relationship between ADCC activity
and long-term survival [27]. At the very
least, it highlights an underlying need to consistently provide patients with the best
quality trastuzumab. Well characterized European Medicines Agency- and/or FDA-approved
trastuzumab biosimilars have fulfilled this need.
Patterns of change were detected in certain quality
attributes of the trastuzumab reference product that may affect
clinical outcomes.
In a clinical study of SB3 vs the trastuzumab reference
product in patients with human epidermal growth factor 2-positive
breast cancer, relatively high rates of breast pathologic complete
response rates and long-term patient survival after SB3 treatment lend
support to the hypothesis that critical quality attributes can
influence clinical outcomes in terms of response rate and long-term
survival.
Authors: F Cardoso; E Senkus; A Costa; E Papadopoulos; M Aapro; F André; N Harbeck; B Aguilar Lopez; C H Barrios; J Bergh; L Biganzoli; C B Boers-Doets; M J Cardoso; L A Carey; J Cortés; G Curigliano; V Diéras; N S El Saghir; A Eniu; L Fallowfield; P A Francis; K Gelmon; S R D Johnston; B Kaufman; S Koppikar; I E Krop; M Mayer; G Nakigudde; B V Offersen; S Ohno; O Pagani; S Paluch-Shimon; F Penault-Llorca; A Prat; H S Rugo; G W Sledge; D Spence; C Thomssen; D A Vorobiof; B Xu; L Norton; E P Winer Journal: Ann Oncol Date: 2018-08-01 Impact factor: 32.976