| Literature DB >> 33302999 |
Giulia Bon1, Laura Pizzuti2, Valentina Laquintana3, Rossella Loria4, Manuela Porru5, Caterina Marchiò6,7, Eriseld Krasniqi8, Maddalena Barba2, Marcello Maugeri-Saccà2, Teresa Gamucci9, Rossana Berardi10, Lorenzo Livi11, Corrado Ficorella12, Clara Natoli13, Enrico Cortesi14, Daniele Generali15, Nicla La Verde16, Alessandra Cassano17, Emilio Bria17,18, Luca Moscetti19, Andrea Michelotti20, Vincenzo Adamo21, Claudio Zamagni22, Giuseppe Tonini23, Giacomo Barchiesi2, Marco Mazzotta2, Daniele Marinelli2,24, Silverio Tomao25, Paolo Marchetti14,24, Maria Rosaria Valerio26, Rosanna Mirabelli27, Antonio Russo26, Maria Agnese Fabbri28, Nicola D'Ostilio29, Enzo Veltri30, Domenico Corsi31, Ornella Garrone32, Ida Paris33, Giuseppina Sarobba34, Francesco Giotta35, Carlo Garufi36, Marina Cazzaniga37, Pietro Del Medico38, Mario Roselli39, Giuseppe Sanguineti40, Isabella Sperduti41, Anna Sapino6,7, Ruggero De Maria42,43, Carlo Leonetti5, Angelo Di Leo44, Gennaro Ciliberto45, Rita Falcioni4, Patrizia Vici2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: HER2-targeting agents have dramatically changed the therapeutic landscape of HER2+ advanced breast cancer (ABC). Within a short time frame, the rapid introduction of new therapeutics has led to the approval of pertuzumab combined with trastuzumab and a taxane in first-line, and trastuzumab emtansine (T-DM1) in second-line. Thereby, evidence of T-DM1 efficacy following trastuzumab/pertuzumab combination is limited, with data from some retrospective reports suggesting lower activity. The purpose of the present study is to investigate T-DM1 efficacy in pertuzumab-pretreated and pertuzumab naïve HER2 positive ABC patients. We also aimed to provide evidence on the exposure to different drugs sequences including pertuzumab and T-DM1 in HER2 positive cell lines.Entities:
Keywords: HER2+ breast cancer; T-DM1 efficacy; Trastuzumab/pertuzumab blockade
Year: 2020 PMID: 33302999 PMCID: PMC7731769 DOI: 10.1186/s13046-020-01797-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Clin Cancer Res ISSN: 0392-9078
Fig. 1Characterization of resistant cell lines. Cell viability of control (CTR), Trastuzumab (T), Pertuzumab (P), and T + P cell lines treated with 10 and 100 μg/ml trastuzumab, pertuzumab and trastuzumab+pertuzumab for 5 days was evaluated by MTT assay (a). Western Blot (WB) analysis of phosphorylated and total HER2, HER3, EGFR, AKT and ERKs was performed on total cell lysates from untreated/treated parental cell lines for 7 days (b, leftmost panel). The basal levels of phosphorylated and total HER2, HER3, EGFR, AKT and ERKs were evaluated by WB in CTR, T, P, and T + P resistant cell lines (b, rightmost panel). HER2 total and phosphorylated levels evaluation by WB was repeated in CTR, T, P, and T + P cell lines following resistant cell lines establishment (c). The anti-HSP70 antibody was used to validate equivalent amount of loaded proteins in each lane. Proliferation curves (d) and Invasion assay (e, upper panel) of CTR, T, P, and T + P cell lines. Representative images of invaded cells are reported for each cell line (e, lower panel)
Fig. 2Trastuzumab+pertuzumab combination is associated with HER2 downregulation. Cell viability of CTR, T, P, and T + P SkBr3 and BT474 cells treated with 0.1 μg/ml and 1 μg/ml T-DM1, respectively, for 48 h was evaluated by Crystal Violet Assay (a). The results are expressed as percentage of T-DM1-responsive cells relative to control cells, as mean +/− standard deviation. T-DM1 dose-response curves of T and T + P cells are reported for both SkBr3 and BT474 (b). The expression of phosphorylated and total HER2, HER3, EGFR, AKT and ERKs was evaluated by Western Blot (WB) following exposure to 1 μg/ml T-DM1 for 48 h (c). Representative pre- and post-therapy sections from 2 ABC patients, stained by immunohistochemistry with eosin-hematossilin and anti-HER2 antibody (d)
Immunohistochemical expression of Estrogen Receptor (ER), Progesterone Receptor (PgR) and HER2 in pre- and post-treatment bioptical tissue samples from 4 HER2+, pertuzumab pretreated, advanced breast cancer patients
| ER | PgR | HER2 score | HER2% | FISH | ER | PgR | HER2 | HER2% | FISH | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 90% | 90% | 2+ | 70% | amplified | 90% | 90% | 0 | 0% | – | |
| 90% | 40% | 2+ | 30% | amplified | 90% | 60% | 1+ | 30% | – | |
| 46% | 0% | 2+ | 100% | amplified | 75% | 18% | 1+ | 15% | amplified | |
| 88% | 42% | 3+ | 100% | – | 99% | 1% | 1+ | 60% | amplified | |
Fig. 3Prolonged trastuzumab+pertuzumab induces HER2 nuclear translocation. Control, T, P, and T + P cell lines were plated on poly-l lysine coated slides, and stained 24 hous later with anti-HER2 (green signal) (a). These cells were counterstained with Hoechst to highlight nuclei. Red arrows indicate HER2 localization on cellular protrusions. Cytoplasmic and nuclear fractions extracted from control, T, P, and T + P cells were analysed by Western Blot (WB) for the expression of phosphorylated and total HER2. Lamin A and α-tubulin were used to validate purity of nuclear and cytoplasmic extracts respectively (b). Following pre-treatment with 5 μg/ml trastuzumab + 5 μg/ml pertuzumab for 72 h, cell viability of control cells, pre-treated and T + P BT474 exposed to1 μg/ml T-DM1 for 72 h was evaluated by Crystal Violet Assay (c). Cytoplasmicand nuclear fractions of control, pre-treated and T + P BT474 cells were analysed by WB for the expression of total HER2 (d)
Clinicopathological characteristics of the study participants (N = 555)
| Characteristics | N(%) |
|---|---|
| 54 (26–87) | |
| | 202 (36.4) |
| | 353 (63.6) |
| | 297 (53.5) |
| | 258 (46.5) |
| | 103 (18.6) |
| | 389 (70.1) |
| | 63 (11.3) |
| | 6 (1.1) |
| | 148 (26.7) |
| | 339 (61.1) |
| | 62 (11.2) |
| | 244 (44.0) |
| | 109 (19.6) |
| | 202 (36.4) |
| | 398 (71.7) |
| | 157 (28.3) |
| | 363 (91.2) |
| | 35 (8.8) |
| | 212 (53.3) |
| | 186 (46.7) |
| | 397 (71.5) |
| | 25 (4.5) |
| | 155 (27.9) |
| | 397 (71.5) |
| | 85 (15.3) |
| | 73 (13.2) |
| | 40 |
| | 53 |
| | 47 |
| | 28 |
| | 17 |
| | 25 (4.5) |
| | 371 (66.8%) |
| | 96 (17.3%) |
| | 63 (11.4%) |
aFor patients with early disease at diagnosis (398 patients)
Abbreviations: N Number; yr Years; TP Triple positive; ER Estrogen receptor; PgR Progesterone receptor
Clinical-pathological characteristics of the study participants who received T-DM1 in second-line after a trastuzumab-based first-line (N = 194) and after a pertuzumab-trastuzumab-based first-line (N = 177)
| Characteristics | First-line trastuzumab/ Second-line T-DM1 | First-line pertuzumab-trastuzumab/Second-line T-DM1 [N (%)] | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.83 | |||
| | 91 (46.9%) | 85 (48.0%) | |
| | 103 (53.1%) | 92 (52.0)% | |
| 0.46 | |||
| | 132 (68%) | 114 (64.4%) | |
| | 62 (32%) | 63 (35.6%) | |
| | 45 (25.6%) | 26 (16.6%) | |
| | 131 (74.4%) | 131 (83.4%) | |
| 0.57 | |||
| | 87 (44.8%) | 81 (45.8%) | |
| | 45 (23.2%) | 33 (18.6%) | |
| | 62 (32.0%) | 63 (35.6%) | |
| | 147 (75.8%) | 117 (66.1%) | |
| | 47 (24.2%) | 60 (33.9%) | |
| 0.14 | |||
| | 142 (73.2%) | 117 (66.1%) | |
| | 52 (26.8%) | 60 (33.9%) | |
| 0.38 | |||
| | 128 (66.0%) | 109 (61.6%) | |
| | 66 (34.0%) | 68 (38.4%) | |
| 0.48 | |||
| | 76 (39.2%) | 63 (35.6%) | |
| | 118 (60.8%) | 76 (39.2%) | |
| 0.11 | |||
| | 133 (68.9%) | 135 (76.3%) | |
| | 60 (31.1%) | 42 (23.7%) | |
| 0.10 | |||
| | 66 (46.8%) | 47 (41.2%) | |
| | 75 (53.2%) | 67 (58.8%) | |
aFor patients with early disease at diagnosis
Abbreviations: N Number; TP Triple positive; ER Estrogen receptor; PgR Progesterone receptor
Fig. 4Overall survival (OS) from diagnosis of metastatic disease (a), OS from T-DM1 start (b) and progression free survival to the second-line of treatment (PFS2) (c), in patients treated with trastuzumab-based first-line and T-DM1 in second-line (T - > T-DM1) and in patients treated with pertuzumab-trastuzumab-based first-line and T-DM1 in second-line (P + T - > T-DM1)
Median OS, median PFS in first-line of treatment and median PFS in second-line of treatment by treatment sequences in the overall population and by subgroups defined upon immunohistochemical characterization of molecules features (N:5555)