Everolimus in Postmenopausal Hormone-Receptor–Positive Advanced Breast Cancer

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Everolimus in Postmenopausal Hormone-Receptor–Positive Advanced Breast Cancer. N Engl J Med 2011 Dec 7. Presenstor : CR 周益聖 Instructor : VS 趙大中. 財團法人台灣癌症臨床研究發展基金會. Outline. Adjuvant endocrine therapy in postmenopausal ER+ women Endocrine resistance after Adjuvant endocrine therapy - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Everolimus in Postmenopausal Hormone-Receptor–Positive Advanced Breast

Cancer

N Engl J Med 2011 Dec 7.

Presenstor : CR周益聖 Instructor : VS趙大中

財團法人台灣癌症臨床研究發展基金會

Outline

• Adjuvant endocrine therapy in postmenopausal ER+ women

• Endocrine resistance after Adjuvant endocrine therapy

• Treating Endocrine resistance

Part IAdjuvant endocrine therapy in postmenopausal ER+ women

Tamoxifen & Recurrence

Lancet 365, 1687–1717 (2005).

41% reductions of risks of recurrence

Lancet 365, 1687–1717 (2005).

Tamoxifen & Recurrence

Tamoxifen & Mortality

Lancet 365, 1687–1717 (2005).

34% reductions of risks of mortality

Tamoxifen & Mortality

Lancet 365, 1687–1717 (2005).

Aromatase inhibitor (AI)

• Non-steroidal– block the peripheral conversion of androgens to

estrogens by inhibiting the heme porphyrin portion of aromatase

– Letrozole (Femara®) & Anastrozle (Arimidex®)• Steroidal– binding irreversibly to the androgen binding site– Exemestane (Aromasin®)

Postmenopausal adjuvant endocrine therapy

Expert Rev. Anticancer Ther. 11(2), 277–286 (2011)

Postmenopausal adjuvant endocrine therapy

Expert Rev. Anticancer Ther. 11(2), 277–286 (2011)

勝 (DFS)

Lancet 359, 2131–2139 (2002)

Postmenopausal adjuvant endocrine therapy

Expert Rev. Anticancer Ther. 11(2), 277–286 (2011)

MA.17MA.17 Tamoxifen for 5 yearsLetrozole for 5 years

Placebo for 5 years

N. Engl. J. Med. 349, 1793–1802 (2003)

勝(DFS,OS in LN+

Postmenopausal adjuvant endocrine therapy

Expert Rev. Anticancer Ther. 11(2), 277–286 (2011)

勝 (DFS and OS)

Lancet 365, 1687–1717 (2005)

勝 (DFS and DMFS)

J. Clin. Oncol. 23, 5138–5147 (2005)

Postmenopausal adjuvant endocrine therapy

Expert Rev. Anticancer Ther. 11(2), 277–286 (2011)Lancet 366, 455–462 (2005)

勝(EFS)

Postmenopausal adjuvant endocrine therapy

Expert Rev. Anticancer Ther. 11(2), 277–286 (2011)

勝 DFS and TTDR

N. Engl. J. Med. 353, 2747–2757 (2005) J. Clin. Oncol. 25, 486–492 (2007)

N. Engl. J. Med. 361, 766–776 (2009)

25.8 months

Postmenopausal adjuvant endocrine therapy

Expert Rev. Anticancer Ther. 11(2), 277–286 (2011)N. Engl. J. Med. 353, 2747–2757 (2005)

J. Clin. Oncol. 25, 486–492 (2007) N. Engl. J. Med. 361, 766–776 (2009)

71 months

勝 OS trend

Part IIEndocrine resistance after adjuvant endocrine therapy

Loss of ER

1.Clonal selection2.Transcription suppression of ER geneby promotor methylation

Clin Cancer Res; 16(7); 1979–87.

EGFR/HER2 overexpression

MAPK ↑

Clin Cancer Res; 16(7); 1979–87.

Clin Cancer Res; 16(7); 1979–87.

Nat Rev Cancer 2004 May;4(5):335-48

Clin Cancer Res 2005;11(14) July 15, 2005

S6K1 ↓P-S6 ↓

RAD001

4E-BP1 ↑

eIF-4E ↑eIF-4G ↓

Clin Cancer Res 2005;11(14) July 15, 2005

J Clin Oncol 2009;27:2630-7

J Clin Oncol 2009;27:2630-7

J Clin Oncol 2009;27:2630-7

Significance threshold, one sided P 0.10≦

PCR2 (1.4%) vs 1 (0.8%)

J Clin Oncol 2009;27:2630-7

J Clin Oncol 2009;27:2630-7

J Clin Oncol 2009;27:2630-7

Reduction in percentage positive Ki67 from baseline to day 15

Percentage of patient cases attaining a natural logarithm of percentage positive Ki67of less than 1 at day 15

J Clin Oncol 2009;27:2630-7

Part IIITreating endocrine resistance

Fulvestrant vs. Exemestane post non-steroidal AI

J Clin Oncol 2008;26:1664-70.

3.7 monthsDuration 9.3 months

3.7 monthsDuration 8.3 months

P=0.6531

Everolimus + tamoxifen vs. tamoxifen

• Randomized phase 2 study• 111 postmenopausal women• ER-positive advanced breast cancer• previously treated with an aromatase inhibitor• PFS – 8.6 months vs. 4.5 months, P = 0.002

• OS – median not reached vs. 24.4 months, P = 0.01

33rd Annual San Antonio Breast CancerSymposium, San Antonio, TX, December 8–12, 2010.

Everolimus in Postmenopausal Hormone-Receptor–Positive Advanced Breast Cancer

Study design

• International• Double-blind randomized (2:1)• Phase 3 study• oral everolimus (10 mg qd) or matching

placebo in conjunction with exemestane (25 mg qd)

N Engl J Med 2011 Dec 7.

• postmenopausal women• ER-positive• nonamplified HER2• refractory to previous letrozole or anastrozole – recurrence during or within 12 months after the

end of adjuvant treatment – progression during or within 1 month after the

end of treatment for advanced disease

Everolimus in Postmenopausal Hormone-Receptor–Positive Advanced Breast Cancer

Patients

N Engl J Med 2011 Dec 7.

• Primary: PFS • Secondary– overall survival– overall response rate– clinical benefit rate– time to deterioration of ECOG performance status– safety– Quality of life

• the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer quality-of life core questionnaire (QLQ-C30)

• the breast cancer module (QLQ-BR23)

Everolimus in Postmenopausal Hormone-Receptor–Positive Advanced Breast Cancer

End point

N Engl J Med 2011 Dec 7.

N Engl J Med 2011 Dec 7.

N Engl J Med 2011 Dec 7.

N Engl J Med 2011 Dec 7.

N Engl J Med 2011 Dec 7.

• Serious adverse events – combination-therapy vs. exemestane-alone – 23% (11% ) vs. 12% (1% )

• discontinue everolimus– adverse events

• 19% vs. 4%– withdrawal of consent

• 5% vs. 2%

• discontinue exemestane– adverse events

• 7% vs. 3%– withdrawal of consent

• 7% vs. 2%

Everolimus in Postmenopausal Hormone-Receptor–Positive Advanced Breast Cancer

Safety

N Engl J Med 2011 Dec 7.

6.9 vs. 2.8 msHR : 0.4395% CI : 0.35-0.54P<0.001

10.6 vs. 4.1 msHR : 0.3695% CI : 0.27-0.47P<0.001

N Engl J Med 2011 Dec 7.

N Engl J Med 2011 Dec 7.

N Engl J Med 2011 Dec 7.

• immature at the time of the interim analysis– combination-therapy vs. exemestane-alone – 10.7% vs. 13%

Everolimus in Postmenopausal Hormone-Receptor–Positive Advanced Breast Cancer

Overall survival

N Engl J Med 2011 Dec 7.

Discussion

• Adverse events of everolimus– stomatitis, fatigue, asthenia, diarrhea, cough,

pyrexia, and hyperglycemia• Higher percentage of patients discontinued

everolimus because of a lack of tolerability

N Engl J Med 2011 Dec 7.

Summary

• Addition of everolimus to endocrine therapy results in an improved clinical outcome

• Benefit should be weighed against the side effects observed with everolimus

• Potential of everolimus to benefit patient survival is not yet known

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