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Phase II Study Combining Pembrolizumab with Aromatase Inhibitor in Patients with Metastatic Hormone Receptor Positive Breast Cancer

Xuan Ge, Susan E. Yost, Jin Sun Lee, Paul Frankel, Christopher Ruel, Yujie Cui, Mireya Murga, Aileen Tang, Norma Martínez, Samuel Chung, Christina Yeon, Daphne Stewart, Daneng Li, Swapnil Rajurkar, George Somlo, Joanne Mortimer, James Waisman, Yuan Yuan

2022Cancers12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This study investigated the safety and antitumor activity of aromatase inhibitors (AI) with immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) pembrolizumab in patients with hormone receptor positive (HR+) human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative (HER2−) metastatic breast cancer (MBC) in a phase II study with a safety lead-in (NCT 02648477). Patients received pembrolizumab plus AI up to 2 years or until confirmed progression or unacceptable toxicity. Key eligibility criteria were HR+ HER2− MBC; RECIST v1.1 measurable disease; adequate organ function; and ECOG 0-1. Primary endpoints were safety and overall response rate. A 3-at-risk design was used for the safety lead-in with a targeted accrual of 20 patients. Grade 2 adverse events (AEs) included 35% fatigue, 20% rash, and 10% hot flashes. Grade 3 immune-related AEs (irAEs) related to pembrolizumab included 5% elevated AST/ALT, 5% rash, and 5% lymphopenia. Two (10%) patients had partial responses, three (15%) had stable disease, and 15 (75%) had progression of disease. Median progression-free survival was 1.8 months (95% CI 1.6, 2.6), median overall survival was 17.2 months (95% CI 9.4, NA), and median follow-up time was 40.1 months (range 31.3–46.8 months). The combination was well tolerated, but clinical activity was comparable to AI alone.

Topics & Concepts

PembrolizumabMedicineRashInternal medicineMetastatic breast cancerAdverse effectBreast cancerOncologyAromatase inhibitorProgression-free survivalCancerAromataseGastroenterologyChemotherapyImmunotherapyAdvanced Breast Cancer TherapiesCancer Immunotherapy and BiomarkersHER2/EGFR in Cancer Research