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  • American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)  (3)
  • Hackmann, John  (3)
  • 1
    In: Cancer Research, American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), Vol. 75, No. 9_Supplement ( 2015-05-01), p. S2-07-S2-07
    Abstract: Background: Anthracycline/taxane based regimen are standard of care for neoadjuvant therapy in breast cancer. A reverse sequence of taxanes followed by anthracyclines was suggested to achieve higher pCR rates (H.Earl, Lancet Oncol 2014). Dual HER2 blockade was shown to be superior to trastuzumab alone increasing the pCR rate by 20%. Nab-paclitaxel (nP) is a solvent-free formulation of paclitaxel (P) encapsulated in albumin which might further improve the pCR rate in breast cancer patients receiving neoadjuvant treatment and cause lower toxicity. Methods: In the GeparSepto study (NCT01583426) patients were randomized to either nP (125 mg/m2) q1w or P (80mg/m2) q1w for 12 weeks followed by 4 cycles of conventionally dosed EC (E, epirubicin 90mg/m2; C, cyclophosphamide 600 mg/m2) q3w. The primary objective is to compare the pathological complete response rate (pCR, ypT0 ypN0). Further objectives are to compare the pCR rate in predefined subgroups, pCR by other definitions, clinical response rate, rate of breast conserving surgery and toxicity and compliance. Patients with untreated, histologically confirmed uni- or bilateral, cT2- cT4d carcinoma, and no clinically relevant cardiovascular and other co-morbidities were included. HER2+ patients received trastuzumab (loading dose 8mg/kg; 6 mg/kg) plus pertuzumab (loading dose 840 mg; 420 mg) q3w concomitantly. HER2, estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, Ki67 and SPARC status were centrally assessed prior to randomization for stratification. To increase the pCR rate from 33% with P to 41% with nP, corresponding to an odds ratio of 1.41 with an alpha of 0.05 and a power of 80%, 1200 patients would be needed. A window-of opportunity study was integrated to investigate response to anti-HER2 treatment without chemotherapy, HER2+ patients were randomized to receive 6 weeks of either trastuzumab, pertuzumab or the combination with biomaterial collection at the start and the end of the window. Results: A total of 1204/1229 (window study n=71) recruited patients (7/2012 - 12/2013) from 69 German centers were evaluable, 606 receiving nP. Baseline characteristics are well balanced; median age was 49/50 years (P/nP), 33/33% of the patients presented with HER2+ tumors, 23/23% triple negative breast cancer TNBC (ER and PR & lt;1 %), 87/85% ductal invasive, 56/52% G3 tumors; Ki67 & gt;20% 69/69%; SPARC positive 15.7/16%. 265 patients reported SAEs (119 P/146 nP) and 4 died on study (1 P: cardiac decompensation; 3 nP: accident at home, multiorgan failure, sepsis during EC). The pCR rate (ypT0 ypN0) is 29% with P and 38% with nP, OR 1.5; p & lt;0.01. Conclusions: GeparSepto showed that the pCR rate is significantly higher with nab-paclitaxel compared to solvent-based paclitaxel given weekly before anthracycline based chemotherapy. Subgroupanalyses and 2ndary endpoints will be presented at the meeting. The trial was financially supported by Roche and Celgene. The window-substudy was funded within the EU-FP7 project RESPONSIFY No 278659. Citation Format: Michael Untch, Christian Jackisch, Andreas Schneeweiß, Bettina Conrad, Bahriye Aktas, Carsten Denkert, Holger Eidtmann, Hermann Wiebringhaus, Sherko Kümmel, Jörn Hilfrich, Mathias Warm, Stefan Paepke, Marianne Just, Claus Hanusch, John Hackmann, Jens-Uwe Blohmer, Michael Clemens, Serban Dan Costa, Bernd Gerber, Valentina Nekljudova, Sibylle Loibl, Gunter von Minckwitz. A randomized phase III trial comparing neoadjuvant chemotherapy with weekly nanoparticle-based paclitaxel with solvent-based paclitaxel followed by anthracyline/cyclophosphamide for patients with early breast cancer (GeparSepto); GBG 69 [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the Thirty-Seventh Annual CTRC-AACR San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium: 2014 Dec 9-13; San Antonio, TX. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2015;75(9 Suppl):Abstract nr S2-07.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0008-5472 , 1538-7445
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    Language: English
    Publisher: American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)
    Publication Date: 2015
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  • 2
    In: Clinical Cancer Research, American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), Vol. 28, No. 22 ( 2022-11-14), p. 4995-5003
    Abstract: Although optimal treatment in early triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) remains unclear, de-escalated chemotherapy appears to be an option in selected patients within this aggressive subtype. Previous studies have identified several pro-immune factors as prognostic markers in TNBC, but their predictive impact regarding different chemotherapy strategies is still controversial. Experimental Design: ADAPT-TN is a randomized neoadjuvant multicenter phase II trial in early patients with TNBC (n = 336) who were randomized to 12 weeks of nab-paclitaxel 125 mg/m2 + gemcitabine or carboplatin d 1,8 q3w. Omission of further (neo-) adjuvant chemotherapy was allowed only in patients with pathological complete response [pCR, primary endpoint (ypT0/is, ypN0)]. Secondary invasive/distant disease-free and overall survival (i/dDFS, OS) and translational research objectives included quantification of a predictive impact of markers regarding selection for chemotherapy de-escalation, measured by gene expression of 119 genes (including PAM50 subtype) by nCounter platform and stromal tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (sTIL). Results: After 60 months of median follow-up, 12-week-pCR was favorably associated (HR, 0.24; P = 0.001) with 5y-iDFS of 90.6% versus 62.8%. No survival advantage of carboplatin use was observed, despite a higher pCR rate [HR, 1.04; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.68–1.59]. Additional anthracycline-containing chemotherapy was not associated with a significant iDFS advantage in pCR patients (HR, 1.29; 95% CI, 0.41–4.02). Beyond pCR rate, nodal status and high sTILs were independently associated with better iDFS, dDFS, and OS by multivariable analysis. Conclusions: Short de-escalated neoadjuvant taxane/platinum-based combination therapy appears to be a promising strategy in early TNBC for using pCR rate as an early decision point for further therapy (de-) escalation together with node-negative status and high sTILs. See related commentary by Sharma, p. 4840
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 1078-0432 , 1557-3265
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    Language: English
    Publisher: American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)
    Publication Date: 2022
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  • 3
    In: Cancer Research, American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), Vol. 80, No. 4_Supplement ( 2020-02-15), p. PD5-10-PD5-10
    Abstract: Background: Among patients with highly heterogeneous HER2+ breast cancer (BC), pathological complete response (pCR) (ypT0/is/ypN0) is associated with improved prognosis. The prospective, phase-II neoadjuvant 3-arm WSG HER2+/HR+ trial (ADAPT-TP) showed pCR rates of about 41.0% after 4xT-DM1+/-ET and 15% after trastuzumab+ET. Pre-planned translational analysis of ADAPT-TP has revealed several biomarkers with impact on pCR, such as PIK3CA mutation status, HER2-enriched subtype (by PAM50), Bcl-2 and most notably immune biomarkers (e.g.CD8/tumor center). In particular, higher CD8 protein expression values either at baseline and/or after one cycle (3w) of neoadjuvant therapy were favorable for pCR. Moreover, CD8 and PDL1 dynamics were indicators of early therapy response, and dynamical response was itself favorable for pCR. The impact of immune biomarkers suggests that tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) could serve as predictive markers for de-escalated anti-HER2 therapy, in particular T-DM1. Methods: Semi-quantitative, triplicate TIL measurements were performed in tissue obtained at baseline (TIL-0) and at 3 weeks (TIL-3). At each timepoint, the median of the three measurements was used for analysis. CD8 and PD-L1 expression measurements were obtained by mRNA at baseline at both time points by immunohistochemistry (IHC). Associations of semiquantitative TIL-0/TIL-3 levels with pCR and with other clinical/pathological measurements were analyzed using logistic regression, rank correlations, t and chi-square statistics. Results: TIL-0 and TIL-3 were available in 355/375 and 301/375 randomized patients, respectively. Associations of TIL-0, TIL-3 and TIL-dynamics (increase from TIL-0 to TIL-3) with CD8 and PD-L1 (including dynamics) and with clinical factors (tumor size, nodal status, ER and PR status, grade, patient age, Ki67 and menopausal status) revealed several prominent relationships: Both TIL-0 and TIL-3 were at least moderately correlated with IHC measurements of CD8 (at center, not at invasive margin) and of PD-L1 at both timepoints. At cycle 2, the correlation of TILs and CD8 was strong, particularly in the T-DM1 arms (r=.7, p & lt;.001). CD8 by mRNA was moderately correlated with TIL-0. Correlations between clinical factors and TILs at both timepoints were weak. These associations with known factors influencing pCR suggest a possible direct association of TILs with pCR; logistic regression using standardized TIL-0 revealed a modest (standardized) odds ratio of about 1.4 for pCR for TIL-0 in the T-DM1 arms, though not in the whole cohort. In particular, patients receiving T-DM1 with TIL0≥40% (about 8%) had pCR of 70% vs. 40% pCR for others (p=.016). We observed a dynamic increase of TILs during T-DM1 treatment of about 10 percentage points. However, neither these dynamics nor TIL-3 were significantly associated with pCR (in contrast to CD8 protein expression at cycle 2). Interpretation: To the best of our best knowledge, these are the first prospective data regarding the predictive value of TILs and TIL dynamics in HR+/HER2+ BC treated with de-escalated anti-HER2 therapy. Very high TIL levels ( & gt;40%) were associated with an excellent pCR rate of 70% in TDM1treated patients. However, CD8 expression and dynamics of CD8 were more strongly predictive for efficacy of de-escalated treatment than TILs – despite promising data on baseline and/or on-treatment TILs as markers for improved prognosis and higher sensitivity to (dual) anti-HER2 blockade (with or without chemotherapy) in unselected HER2+ BC. Further research on static and dynamic immune markers (according to HR+ and HR-/HER2+ subtypes) is needed prior to final conclusions regarding the clinical impact of TILs in early HER2+ BC. Citation Format: Claudia Biehl, Cornelia Kolberg-Liedtke, Oleg Gluz, Friedrich Feuerhake, Matthias Christgen, Ronald Kates, Eva-Maria Grischke, Helmut Forstbauer, Michael Braun, Mathias Warm, John Hackmann, Christoph Uleer, Bahriye Aktas, Claudia Schumacher, Sherko Kuemmel, Sanne L de Haas, Regula Deurloo, Rachel Wuerstlein, Ulrike Nitz, Hans H. Kreipe, Nadia Harbeck, West German Study Group. Impact of immune markers on response to neoadjuvant de-escalated T-DM1 or trastuzumab with/or without endocrine therapy in HR+/HER2+ early breast cancer: A translational subproject of the WSG-ADAPT-HER2+/HR+ trial [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 2019 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium; 2019 Dec 10-14; San Antonio, TX. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2020;80(4 Suppl):Abstract nr PD5-10.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0008-5472 , 1538-7445
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    Language: English
    Publisher: American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)
    Publication Date: 2020
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