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BERENICE Final Analysis: Cardiac Safety Study of Neoadjuvant Pertuzumab, Trastuzumab, and Chemotherapy Followed by Adjuvant Pertuzumab and Trastuzumab in HER2-Positive Early Breast Cancer

Chau T. Dang, Michael S. Ewer, Suzette Delaloge, Jean-­Marc Ferrero, Rámón Colomer, Luis de la Cruz‐Merino, Theresa L. Werner, Katherine Dadswell, Mark Verrill, Daniel Eiger, Sriparna Sarkar, Sanne Lysbet de Haas, Eleonora Restuccia, Sandra M. Swain

2022Cancers17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BERENICE (NCT02132949) assessed the cardiac safety of the neoadjuvant−adjuvant pertuzumab−trastuzumab-based therapy for high-risk, HER2-positive early breast cancer (EBC). We describe key secondary objectives at final analysis. Eligible patients received dose-dense doxorubicin and cyclophosphamide q2w × 4 ➝ paclitaxel qw × 12 (Cohort A) or 5-fluorouracil, epirubicin, cyclophosphamide q3w × 4 ➝ docetaxel q3w × 4 (B) as per physician’s choice. Pertuzumab−trastuzumab (q3w) was initiated from the taxane start and continued post-surgery to complete 1 year. Median follow-up: 64.5 months. There were no new cardiac issues and a low incidence of Class III/IV heart failure (Cohort B only: one patient (0.5%) in the adjuvant and treatment-free follow-up (TFFU) periods). Fourteen patients (7.7%) had LVEF declines of ≥10% points from baseline to <50% in Cohort A, as did 20 (10.5%) in B during the adjuvant period (12 (6.2%) in A and 7 (3.6%) in B during TFFU). The five-year event-free survival rates in Cohorts A and B were 90.8% (95% CI: 86.5, 95.2) and 89.2% (84.8, 93.6), respectively. The five-year overall survival rates were 96.1% (95% CI: 93.3, 98.9) and 93.8% (90.3, 97.2), respectively. The final analysis of BERENICE further supports pertuzumab−trastuzumab-based therapies as standard of care for high-risk, HER2-positive EBC.

Topics & Concepts

PertuzumabTrastuzumabMedicineEpirubicinInternal medicineBreast cancerDocetaxelCohortCyclophosphamideOncologyChemotherapySurgeryCancerHER2/EGFR in Cancer ResearchBreast Cancer Treatment StudiesCancer Treatment and Pharmacology