FDA Approval Summary: Pertuzumab, Trastuzumab, and Hyaluronidase–zzxf Injection for Subcutaneous Use in Patients with HER2-positive Breast Cancer
Jennifer Gao, Christy Osgood, Yutao Gong, Hui Zhang, Erik Bloomquist, Xiling Jiang, Junshan Qiu, Jingyu Yu, Pengfei Song, Nam Atiqur Rahman, Haw-Jyh Chiu, Tiffany K. Ricks, Fatima Rizvi, Sherry Hou, Willie Wilson, Abde M. Abukhdeir, Jeffrey D. Seidman, Soma Ghosh, Reena Philip, William F. Pierce, Vishal Bhatnagar, Paul G. Kluetz, Richard Pazdur, Julia A. Beaver, Laleh Amiri‐Kordestani
Abstract
On June 29, 2020, the FDA approved pertuzumab, trastuzumab, and hyaluronidase-zzxf subcutaneous injection (Phesgo) for the treatment of patients with HER2-positive early-stage and metastatic breast cancer. Patients should be selected for therapy based on an FDA-approved companion diagnostic test. Approval was primarily based on the FeDeriCa trial, a randomized, open-label, multicenter comparability study of pertuzumab, trastuzumab, and hyaluronidase-zzxf subcutaneous injection compared with intravenous pertuzumab and intravenous trastuzumab administered in the neoadjuvant and adjuvant settings with chemotherapy for the treatment of patients with early breast cancer. The pharmacokinetic endpoints were, first, to demonstrate that the exposure of subcutaneous pertuzumab was not inferior to that of intravenous pertuzumab, and then to demonstrate that the exposure of subcutaneous trastuzumab was not inferior to that of intravenous trastuzumab. The primary endpoints were met with the observed lower limit of the two-sided 90% confidence intervals above the prespecified noninferiority margins. The most common adverse reactions were alopecia, nausea, diarrhea, anemia, and asthenia. The totality of the evidence demonstrated comparability of the subcutaneous product to intravenous, allowing for extrapolation and approval of all breast cancer indications for which intravenous trastuzumab and pertuzumab are approved.