| Literature DB >> 33863913 |
Lillian M Smyth1,2, Gerald Batist3, Funda Meric-Bernstam4, Peter Kabos5, Iben Spanggaard6, Ana Lluch7,8, Komal Jhaveri1, Andrea Varga9, Andrea Wong10, Alison M Schram1, Helen Ambrose11, T Hedley Carr11, Elza C de Bruin11, Carolina Salinas-Souza11, Andrew Foxley11, Joana Hauser11, Justin P O Lindemann11, Rhiannon Maudsley11, Robert McEwen11, Michele Moschetta11, Myria Nikolaou11, Gaia Schiavon11, Pedram Razavi1, Udai Banerji12, José Baselga1,13, David M Hyman1,2, Sarat Chandarlapaty14.
Abstract
Five to ten percent of ER+ metastatic breast cancer (MBC) tumors harbor somatic PTEN mutations. Loss of function of this tumor-suppressor gene defines a highly aggressive, treatment-refractory disease for which new therapies are urgently needed. This Phase I multipart expansion study assessed oral capivasertib with fulvestrant in patients with PTEN-mutant ER+ MBC. Safety and tolerability were assessed by standard methods. Plasma and tumor were collected for NGS and immunohistochemistry analyses of PTEN protein expression. In 31 eligible patients (12 fulvestrant naive; 19 fulvestrant pretreated), the 24-week clinical benefit rate was 17% in fulvestrant-naive and 42% in fulvestrant-pretreated patients, with objective response rate of 8% and 21%, respectively. Non-functional PTEN was centrally confirmed in all cases by NGS or immunohistochemistry. Co-mutations occurred in PIK3CA (32%), with less ESR1 (10% vs 72%) and more TP53 (40% vs 28%) alterations in fulvestrant-naive versus fulvestrant-pretreated patients, respectively. PTEN was clonally dominant in most patients. Treatment-related grade ≥3 adverse events occurred in 32% of patients, most frequently diarrhea and maculopapular rash (both n = 2). In this clinical study, which selectively targeted the aggressive PTEN-mutant ER+ MBC, capivasertib plus fulvestrant was tolerable and clinically active. Phenotypic and genomic differences were apparent between fulvestrant-naive and -pretreated patients.Trial registration number for the study is NCT01226316.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33863913 PMCID: PMC8052445 DOI: 10.1038/s41523-021-00251-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Breast Cancer ISSN: 2374-4677
Fig. 1PTEN mutations are associated with a poor prognosis in ER+ HER2– breast cancer.
a Early-stage ER+ HER2– breast cancers (METABRIC data)[19]. b Metastatic ER+ HER2– breast cancers (MSK-IMPACT data)[12]. Kaplan–Meier survival analysis for ER+ HER2– breast cancer patients by PTEN status in early-stage and metastatic BC: a overall survival of patients with ER+ HER2– primary breast tumors (n = 1398) by PTEN mutation status, using the same criteria employed in this study for enrollment; b overall survival from time of metastatic recurrence of patients with metastatic ER+ HER2– breast cancer (n = 949) by PTEN status. A patient with multiple metastatic samples sequenced by next-generation sequencing was considered PTEN altered if at least one sample harbored an eligible PTEN alteration. Overall survival for the METABRIC data utilized univariable or multivariable Cox proportional hazards models to examine the association between mutations and survival. Breast cancer-specific survival was used as the endpoint. Patients with deaths from other or unknown causes were censored at the date of death, and all other patients were censored at the date of last contact[19]. Overall survival for the MSK-IMPACT data, as defined by time of metastatic recurrence until death or last follow-up, was analyzed utilizing the MSK cohort[12] restricted to patients with metastatic ER+/HER2– disease (n = 949 patients). Univariate P values were calculated using the log-rank test. The models were further adjusted using left truncation methods[37] for late entry when tumor sequencing to assess PTEN status was performed after metastatic recurrence. ER+ estrogen-receptor-positive, HER2– human epidermal growth factor receptor negative.
Demographic and disease characteristics in 31 PTEN-mutanta ER+ MBC patients treated with capivasertib and fulvestrant.
| Characteristics | Fulvestrant naive ( | Fulvestrant pretreated ( |
|---|---|---|
| 51 (31–68) | 55 (42–70) | |
| 12 (100) | 19 (100) | |
| White | 10 (83) | 16 (84) |
| Black or African American | 1 (8) | 1 (5) |
| Asian | 0 | 1 (5) |
| Other | 1 (8) | 1 (5) |
| 0, normal activity | 5 (42) | 8 (42) |
| 1, restricted activity | 7 (58) | 11 (58) |
| 12 (100) | 16 (84) | |
| 10 (83) | 17 (89)c | |
| 2 (17) | 1 (5)c | |
| 1 (8) | 2 (11) | |
| 7 (1–11) | 7 (3–13) | |
| Chemotherapye | 4 (0–10) | 2 (1–8) |
| Endocrine therapye | 2 (0–4) | 4 (1–6) |
| 1 (8) | 12 (63) | |
| 3 (25) | 9 (47) | |
| 0 | 2 (11) | |
Thirty-two patients were enrolled, but 1 patient deteriorated prior to starting study treatment; therefore, data are presented here for 31 treated patients.
ER+ estrogen-receptor-positive, HER2+ human epidermal growth factor receptor positive, IHC immunohistochemistry, MBC metastatic breast cancer, PR+/–, progesterone-receptor-positive/negative.
aA PTEN alteration was detected in all patients.
bIncludes both primary and metastatic biopsies.
cProgesterone receptor status was missing for one patient in the fulvestrant-pretreated cohort.
dInclusive of adjuvant and metastatic therapies received.
eExploratory analyses.
Fig. 2Best RECIST response, PTEN, and broader mutation profiling in patients with PTEN-mutant ER+ MBC treated with capivasertib and fulvestrant.
AF allele fraction, ER+ estrogen-receptor-positive, FFPE formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded, IHC immunohistochemistry, MAF mutant allele fraction, MBC metastatic breast cancer, NGS next-generation sequencing, RECIST Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors.
Clinical efficacy summary in patients with PTEN-mutant ER+ MBC treated with capivasertib and fulvestrant.
| Fulvestrant naive ( | Fulvestrant pretreated ( | Total ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Objective response rate, % (95% CI) | 8 (0–39) | 21 (6–46) | 16 (6–34) |
| Stable disease ≥24 weeks, | 1 (8) | 4 (21) | 5 (16) |
| Clinical benefit rate, % (95% CI)a | 17 (2–48) | 42 (20–67) | 32 (17–51) |
| Median progression-free survival, months (95% CI) | 2.6 (1–4) | 4.1 (2–7) | 2.7 (2–4) |
CI confidence interval, ER+ estrogen-receptor-positive, MBC metastatic breast cancer.
aPercentage of responders (patients who had a confirmed partial or complete response) plus those with stable disease for ≥24 weeks.
AEs occurring in >10% of treated patients irrespective of causality.
| MedDRA preferred term, | All patients ( | |
|---|---|---|
| All grades | Grade ≥3 | |
| Patients with any AE | 31 (100) | 17 (55) |
| Diarrhea | 21 (68) | 2 (6) |
| Nausea | 14 (45) | 1 (3) |
| Headache | 9 (29) | 2 (6) |
| Vomiting | 9 (29) | 1 (3) |
| Dizziness | 7 (23) | 0 |
| Fatigue | 7 (23) | 0 |
| Abdominal pain | 5 (16) | 1 (3) |
| Constipation | 5 (16) | 0 |
| Hyperglycemia | 5 (16) | 1 (3) |
| Rash maculopapular | 5 (16) | 3 (10) |
| Decreased appetite | 4 (13) | 0 |
| Flatulence | 4 (13) | 0 |
| Pruritus | 4 (13) | 0 |
AE adverse event, MedDRA Medical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities.
Fig. 3Study design of the PTEN-mutant breast cancer cohort.
Up to 24 patients in each cohort. Interim analyses were carried out after 12 patients were followed up for 24 weeks or withdrawn from the study. Subsequent patients were recruited only if sufficient antitumor activity (assessed by CBR24) was observed at the interim analyses. CBR24 clinical benefit rate at 24 weeks, ER+ estrogen-receptor-positive, ORR objective response rate, PFS progression-free survival.