Video

Dr. Crew on New Research in Advanced HER2+ Breast Cancer

Katherine Crew, MD, MS, discusses new research in the advanced HER2-positive breast cancer landscape.

Katherine Crew, MD, MS, associate professor, Columbia University Irving Medical Center, discusses new research in the advanced HER2-positive breast cancer landscape.

At the 2019 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium, there were 5 trials presented in the HER2-positive breast cancer paradigm. Two of the trials were simultaneously published in the New England Journal of Medicine.

The first study, called HER2CLIMB, looked at a new TKI called tucatinib in the third-line metastatic setting with a heavily pretreated population. The other unique aspect of the study was that they included patients with untreated or progressing brain metastases; HER2-positive breast cancer has a propensity for going to the brain and up to 50% of patients with HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer can develop disease in the central nervous system. When tucatinib was added to trastuzumab (Herceptin) and capecitabine (Xeloda) chemotherapy, it led to a significant improvement in progression free survival (PFS) and overall survival. The HER2CLIMB study has changed the standard of care for patients in the third-line metastatic setting of HER2-positive disease, says Crew.

The other intriguing trial was DESTINY-Breast01; patients were treated with an antibody-drug conjugate called fam-trastuzumab deruxtecan-nxki (Enhertu). The open-label, single-group, phase II study showed that fam-trastuzumab deruxtecan-nxki elicited a high overall response rate in a heavily pretreated metastatic HER2-positive population. It more than doubled the PFS that is expected in such a population, concludes Crew.

Related Videos
Michael R. Bishop, MD
Lori A Leslie, MD
Andrew Ip, MD
Mansi R. Shah, MD
Elizabeth Buchbinder, MD
Benjamin Garmezy, MD, assistant director, Genitourinary Research, Sarah Cannon Research Institute
Alec Watson, MD
Sagar D. Sardesai, MBBS
Ashkan Emadi, MD, PhD
Matthew J. Baker, PhD