Endocrine-Sensitive Disease Rate in Postmenopausal Patients With Estrogen Receptor–Rich/ERBB2-Negative Breast Cancer Receiving Neoadjuvant Anastrozole, Fulvestrant, or Their Combination: A Phase 3 Randomized Clinical Trial
Creators
- Ma, Cynthia X.1
- Suman, Vera J.2
- Sanati, Souzan3
- Vij, Kiran1
- Anurag, Meenakshi4
- Leitch, A. Marilyn5
- Unzeitig, Gary W.6
- Hoog, Jeremy1
- Fernandez-Martinez, Aranzazu7
- Fan, Cheng7
- Gibbs, Richard A.4
- Watson, Mark A.1
- Dockter, Travis J.2
- Hahn, Olwen8
- Guenther, Joseph M.9
- Caudle, Abigail10
- Crouch, Erika1
- Tiersten, Amy11
- Mita, Monica3
- Razaq, Wajeeha12
- 1. Washington University in St. Louis
- 2. Mayo Clinic
- 3. Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
- 4. Baylor College of Medicine
- 5. University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
- 6. Doctor's Hospital of Laredo
- 7. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
- 8. University of Chicago
- 9. Saint Elizabeth Medical Center South
- 10. MD Anderson Cancer Center
- 11. Mount Sinai Hospital
- 12. University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center
Description
Importance: Adding fulvestrant to anastrozole (A+F) improved survival in postmenopausal women with advanced estrogen receptor (ER)–positive/ERBB2 (formerly HER2)–negative breast cancer. However, the combination has not been tested in early-stage disease.
Objective: To determine whether neoadjuvant fulvestrant or A+F increases the rate of pathologic complete response or ypT1-2N0/N1mic/Ki67 2.7% or less residual disease (referred to as endocrine-sensitive disease) over anastrozole alone.
Design, Setting, and Participants: A phase 3 randomized clinical trial assessing differences in clinical and correlative outcomes between each of the fulvestrant-containing arms and the anastrozole arm. Postmenopausal women with clinical stage II to III, ER-rich (Allred score 6-8 or >66%)/ERBB2-negative breast cancer were included. All analyses were based on data frozen on March 2, 2023.
Interventions: Patients received anastrozole, fulvestrant, or a combination for 6 months preoperatively. Tumor Ki67 was assessed at week 4 and optionally at week 12, and if greater than 10% at either time point, the patient switched to neoadjuvant chemotherapy or immediate surgery.
Main Outcomes and Measures: The primary outcome was the endocrine-sensitive disease rate (ESDR). A secondary outcome was the percentage change in Ki67 after 4 weeks of neoadjuvant endocrine therapy (NET) (week 4 Ki67 suppression).
Results: Between February 2014 and November 2018, 1362 female patients (mean [SD] age, 65.0 [8.2] years) were enrolled. Among the 1298 evaluable patients, ESDRs were 18.7% (95% CI, 15.1%-22.7%), 22.8% (95% CI, 18.9%-27.1%), and 20.5% (95% CI, 16.8%-24.6%) with anastrozole, fulvestrant, and A+F, respectively. Compared to anastrozole, neither fulvestrant-containing regimen significantly improved ESDR or week 4 Ki67 suppression. The rate of week 4 or week 12 Ki67 greater than 10% was 25.1%, 24.2%, and 15.7% with anastrozole, fulvestrant, and A+F, respectively. Pathologic complete response/residual cancer burden class I occurred in 8 of 167 patients and 17 of 167 patients, respectively (15.0%; 95% CI, 9.9%-21.3%), after switching to neoadjuvant chemotherapy due to week 4 or week 12 Ki67 greater than 10%. PAM50 subtyping derived from RNA sequencing of baseline biopsies available for 753 patients (58%) identified 394 luminal A, 304 luminal B, and 55 nonluminal tumors. A+F led to a greater week 4 Ki67 suppression than anastrozole alone in luminal B tumors (median [IQR], −90.4% [−95.2 to −81.9%] vs −76.7% [−89.0 to −55.6%]; P < .001), but not luminal A tumors. Thirty-six nonluminal tumors (65.5%) had a week 4 or week 12 Ki67 greater than 10%.
Conclusions and Relevance: In this randomized clinical trial, neither fulvestrant nor A+F significantly improved the 6-month ESDR over anastrozole in ER-rich/ERBB2-negative breast cancer. Aromatase inhibition remains the standard-of-care NET. Differential NET response by PAM50 subtype in exploratory analyses warrants further investigation.
Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01953588
Notes
Data availability
See Supplement 3.Files
jamaoncology_ma_2024_oi_230081_1710962796.61252.pdf
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Additional details
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1001/jamaoncol.2023.6038
- Other
- oai:uchicago.tind.io:13770
Funding
- National Cancer Institute
- U10CA180821
- National Cancer Institute
- U10CA180882
- National Cancer Institute
- UG1CA189856
- National Cancer Institute
- UG1CA232760
- National Cancer Institute
- UG1CA233180
- National Cancer Institute
- UG1CA233193
- National Cancer Institute
- UG1CA233327
- National Cancer Institute
- UG1CA233329
- National Cancer Institute
- UG1CA233302
- National Cancer Institute
- UG1CA233339
- National Cancer Institute
- UG1CA233373
- National Cancer Institute
- UG1CA233333
- National Cancer Institute
- U10CA180868
- National Cancer Institute
- U24CA196171
- National Cancer Institute
- P50CA186784
- National Cancer Institute
- P50-CA058223
- National Cancer Institute
- U01CA214125
- National Cancer Institute
- U24CA210954
- National Cancer Institute
- 3U10CA180821-05S1
- BIQSFP
- HHSN26100800001E
- Breast Cancer Research Foundation
- AstraZeneca
- Genentech
- Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas
- RR140033
- Ralph and Lisa Eads
- McNair