| Literature DB >> 35282535 |
Ian Landry1, Vikram Sumbly2, Mallorie Vest2.
Abstract
Triple-negative breast cancers (TNBCs) are aggressive tumors that are more common in young women, African American populations, and those with hereditary mutations. These tumors are notable for their high recurrence rate and predilection for chemoresistance. The goal of this narrative review is to describe the current treatment options for patients diagnosed with TNBC and to review the studies that have put forward these recommendations. We searched PubMed and Cochrane databases for free full-text, English-language studies published within the last several years pertaining to the search items "triple negative breast cancer" and "treatment". We included clinical trials and retrospective reviews that had clear designs and assessed their findings against a gold standard or placebo and included evidence of overall response and/or survival outcomes. Patients with early-stage (I-III) TNBC still benefit from treatment with chemotherapeutic regimens involving anthracyclines, taxanes, and antimetabolites. Platinum-based therapies have been shown to improve the overall pathologic complete response (pCR), but there is conflicting evidence with regard to their contribution to disease-free survival (DFS) and overall survival (OS), even with the addition of a poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitor. Patients with residual disease after neoadjuvant chemotherapy and surgical intervention have shown a significant improvement in OS when treated with adjuvant capecitabine. The high mutation burden in metastatic TNBC (mTNBC) allows for targeted therapies and immune checkpoint inhibitors. mTNBCs that express programmed death ligand-1 (PD-L1) receptors may achieve improved response and survival if their regimen includes a monoclonal antibody. Antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) can deliver high doses of chemotherapy and significantly impact survival in mTNBC regardless of the level of biomarkers expressed by the tumor cells. PARP inhibitors significantly improve survival in newly diagnosed, treatment-naive mTNBC, but have shown mixed results in patients with a history of previous therapy. PARP inhibitors may also target patients with somatic breast cancer (BRCA) and partner and localizer of BRCA-2 (PALB2) mutations, which would allow for more options in this subset of patients. While other rare targets have shown mixed results, the future of treatment may lie in anti-androgen therapy or the development of cancer vaccinations that may increase the immunogenicity of the tumor environment. The management of TNBC includes treatment with multimodal chemotherapy, immune checkpoint inhibitors, and ADCs. The optimal approach depends on a multitude of factors, which include the stage of the tumor, its unique mutational burden, comorbid conditions, and the functional status of the patient. Physicians should be familiar with the advantages and disadvantages of each therapy in order to appropriately counsel and guide their patients.Entities:
Keywords: breast cancer; chemotherapy; radiation; therapeutics; triple negative breast cancer
Year: 2022 PMID: 35282535 PMCID: PMC8905549 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.21970
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Current chemotherapy options for triple-negative breast cancer
pCR: pathologic complete response; TNBC: triple-negative breast cancer; DFS: disease-free survival; OS: overall survival; CTx: chemotherapy; PM: paclitaxel/non-pegylated liposomal doxorubicin; Bev: bevacizumab (Avastin); Cbp: carboplatin; TAC: docetaxel (Taxotere), doxorubicin (Adriamycin), cyclophosphamide; HR: hazard ratio
| Study | Population | Regimen | Complete response (CR) | P-value | Disease-free survival (DFS) | P-value | Overall survival (OS) | P-value |
| Chemotherapy trials | ||||||||
| Green et al. (2005) [ | I-IIIA TNBC without previous treatment (n=258) | Weekly paclitaxel | 48% | 0.007 | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Every 3 weeks | 23% | NA | NA | |||||
| GeparSixto, von Minckwitz et al. (2014) [ | II-III TNBC without previous treatment (n=315) | PM + Bev | 36.9% | 0.005 | 76% | 0.035, HR: 0.56 (0.33-0.96) | NA | NA |
| PM + Bev + Cbp | 53.2% | 86% | NA | |||||
| CALGB 40603 (Alliance), Sikov et al. (2014) [ | II-III TNBC without previous treatment (n=433) | T-AC + Bev | 46% | 0.0018 | 71% | 0.36, HR: 0.84 (0.58-1.22) | NA | NA |
| T-Cbp-AC + Bev | 60% | 76% | NA | |||||
| BrighTNess, Loibl et al. (2018) [ | II-III TNBC without previous treatment (n=634) | T-AC | 31% | <0.001 | 68.5% | HR: 0.58 (0.39-0.87) | 13.9% | NA |
| T-Cbp-AC | 58% | 79.3% | 10% | |||||
| T/Cbp-V-AC | 53% | 78.2% | 12% | |||||
| CREATE-X, Masuda et al. (2017) [ | I-III TNBC who did not achieve a pCR after NAC/surgery (n=286, 32% of total population) | Control | NA | NA | 56.1% | HR: 0.58 (0.39-0.87) | 70.3% | HR: 0.52 (0.30-0.90) |
| Capecitabine | NA | 69.8% | 78.8% | |||||
| GEICAM, Lluch et al. (2019) [ | II-III TNBC previously treated with anthracycline +/- taxane (n=448) | Observation | NA | NA | 76.8% | HR: 0.82 (0.63-1.06) | 85.9% | HR: 0.92 (0.66-1.28) |
| Capecitabine | NA | 79.6% | 86.2% | |||||
| Zhang et al. (2015) [ | mTNBC previously treated with at least 1 line of CTx (n=379) | Platinum CTx | NA | NA | 7.8 months | <0.001 | 19.6 months | 0.82 |
| Non-platinum CTx | NA | 4.9 months | 19.2 months | |||||
Current immunotherapy options for triple-negative breast cancer
*Chemotherapy options included nab-paclitaxel, paclitaxel, or gemcitabine/carboplatin. **TPC (treatment of physician’s choice) included capecitabine, vinorelbine, or eribulin
pCR: pathologic complete response; TNBC: triple-negative breast cancer; DFS: disease-free survival; OS: overall survival; CTx: chemotherapy; Cbp: carboplatin; Nab-Pac: nab-paclitaxel; pembro: pembrolizumab; EC: epirubicin/cyclophosphamide; GC: gemcitabine/carboplatin
| Study | Population | Regimen | Complete response (CR) | P-value | Disease-free survival (DFS) | P-value | Overall survival (OS) | P-value |
| Immunotherapy trials | ||||||||
| GeparNuevo, Loibl et al. (2019) [ | II-III TNBC without previous treatment (n=174) | CTx only | 41.40% | 0.035, OR: 2.22 (1.06-4.64) | 79.50% | 0.015, HR: 0.37 (0.15-0.87) | NA | NA |
| Duravalumab + Nab-Pac + EC | 61% | 91.40% | NA | |||||
| NEOTRIPAPDL1, Bianchini (2020) [ | Early high-risk or locally advanced TNBC (n=280) | Placebo + Cbp/Nab-Pac | 55% | 0.148 | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Atezolizumab + Cbp/Nab-Pac | 32% | |||||||
| Keynote-355, Schmid et al. (2020) [ | Previously untreated mTNBC (PD-L1+) (n=847) | Pembro + CTx* | NA | NA | 9.7 months | <0.001, HR: 0.65 | NA | NA |
| Placebo + CTx | NA | 5.6 months | NA | |||||
| NA | NA | |||||||
| IMpassion130, Emens et al. (2021) [ | mTNBC or unresectable TNBC without prior treatment or completed neoadjuvant CTx longer than 12 months (PD-L1+) (n=396) | Placebo + Nab-Pac | NA | NA | 5.3 months | <0.05, HR: 0.63 (0.50-0.80) | 18 months | <0.05, HR: 0.71 (0.54-0.93) |
| Atezolizumab + Nab-Pac | NA | 7.5 months | 25 months | |||||
| IMpassion131, Miles et al. (2021) [ | mTNBC without prior treatment or completed neoadjuvant CTx longer than 12 months (PD-L1+) (n=333) | Placebo + Pac | NA | NA | 22.1 months | HR: 1.12 (0.76-1.65) | NA | NA |
| Atezolizumab + Pac + DEX | NA | 28 months | NA | |||||
| O’Shaughnessy et al. (2011) [ | mTNBC or locally recurrent who received no more than 2 previous CTx regimens (n=116) | GC alone | 32% | <0.02 | 3.6 months | HR: 0.59 (0.39-0.90) | 7.7 months | HR: 0.57 (0.36-0.90) |
| GC + Iniparib | 52% | 5.9 months | 12.3 months | |||||
| EMBRACA, Litton et al. (2019) [ | BRCA+/HER2- mTNBC who received no more than 3 lines of previous CTx (n=412) | Talazoparib | NA | NA | 8.6 months | <0.001, HR: 0.54 (0.41-0.71) | 19.3 months | 0.17, HR: 0.85 (0.67-1.07) |
| TPC** | NA | 5.6 months | 19.5 months | |||||
| OlympiAD, Robson et al. (2019) [ | BRCA+/HER2- mTNBC who received no more than 2 lines of previous CTx (n=205) | Olaparib | NA | NA | NA | NA | 22.6 months | 0.02, HR: 0.51 (0.29-0.90) |
| TPC** | NA | NA | 14.7 months | |||||
Figure 1Pathologic complete response (pCR) in early-stage triple-negative breast cancer*
*[10-13,17,18]
Figure 2Disease-free survival (DFS) in early-stage triple-negative breast cancer*
*[11-15,17]
Figure 3Disease-free survival (DFS) in metastatic triple-negative breast cancer*
*[16,19-23]
Figure 4Overall survival (OS) in metastatic triple-negative breast cancer*
*[16,20,22-24]
Selection of current clinical trials in triple-negative breast cancer
mTNBC: metastatic triple-negative breast cancer; ORR: overall response rate; ctDNA: circulating tumor DNA; AR: androgen receptor
| Clinical trial ID # | Phase | Patients | Interventions | Outcomes of interest |
| NCT04024800 [ | II | mTNBC (n=29) | AE37 peptide vaccine +/- GMCSF + pembrolizumab | Recommended dose, ORR |
| NCT03362060 [ | I | HLA-A2+ mTNBC (n=20) | PVX-410 vaccine + pembrolizumab | Immune response, ORR |
| NCT02316457 [ | I | TNBC (n=42) | IVAC_W_bre1_uID vaccination | Number of adverse events, induced T-cell response |
| NCT03145961 [ | II | Early-stage TNBC (n=208) | Pembrolizumab | ctDNA levels |
| NCT03199040 [ | I | TNBC (n=13) | Neoantigen DNA vaccine +/- durvalumab | Safety immune response |
| NCT01889238 [ | II | Advanced AR+ TNBC (n=118) | Enzalutamide | Clinical benefit rate |
| NCT03090165 [ | I/II | AR+ TNBC (n=37) | Ribociclib + bicalutamide | Maximum tolerated dose, clinical benefit rate, ORR |