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Adaptive Randomization of Neratinib in Early Breast Cancer.

Authors :
Park JW
Liu MC
Yee D
Yau C
van 't Veer LJ
Symmans WF
Paoloni M
Perlmutter J
Hylton NM
Hogarth M
DeMichele A
Buxton MB
Chien AJ
Wallace AM
Boughey JC
Haddad TC
Chui SY
Kemmer KA
Kaplan HG
Isaacs C
Nanda R
Tripathy D
Albain KS
Edmiston KK
Elias AD
Northfelt DW
Pusztai L
Moulder SL
Lang JE
Viscusi RK
Euhus DM
Haley BB
Khan QJ
Wood WC
Melisko M
Schwab R
Helsten T
Lyandres J
Davis SE
Hirst GL
Sanil A
Esserman LJ
Berry DA
Source :
The New England journal of medicine [N Engl J Med] 2016 Jul 07; Vol. 375 (1), pp. 11-22.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Background: The heterogeneity of breast cancer makes identifying effective therapies challenging. The I-SPY 2 trial, a multicenter, adaptive phase 2 trial of neoadjuvant therapy for high-risk clinical stage II or III breast cancer, evaluated multiple new agents added to standard chemotherapy to assess the effects on rates of pathological complete response (i.e., absence of residual cancer in the breast or lymph nodes at the time of surgery).<br />Methods: We used adaptive randomization to compare standard neoadjuvant chemotherapy plus the tyrosine kinase inhibitor neratinib with control. Eligible women were categorized according to eight biomarker subtypes on the basis of human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) status, hormone-receptor status, and risk according to a 70-gene profile. Neratinib was evaluated against control with regard to 10 biomarker signatures (prospectively defined combinations of subtypes). The primary end point was pathological complete response. Volume changes on serial magnetic resonance imaging were used to assess the likelihood of such a response in each patient. Adaptive assignment to experimental groups within each disease subtype was based on Bayesian probabilities of the superiority of the treatment over control. Enrollment in the experimental group was stopped when the 85% Bayesian predictive probability of success in a confirmatory phase 3 trial of neoadjuvant therapy reached a prespecified threshold for any biomarker signature ("graduation"). Enrollment was stopped for futility if the probability fell to below 10% for every biomarker signature.<br />Results: Neratinib reached the prespecified efficacy threshold with regard to the HER2-positive, hormone-receptor-negative signature. Among patients with HER2-positive, hormone-receptor-negative cancer, the mean estimated rate of pathological complete response was 56% (95% Bayesian probability interval [PI], 37 to 73%) among 115 patients in the neratinib group, as compared with 33% among 78 controls (95% PI, 11 to 54%). The final predictive probability of success in phase 3 testing was 79%.<br />Conclusions: Neratinib added to standard therapy was highly likely to result in higher rates of pathological complete response than standard chemotherapy with trastuzumab among patients with HER2-positive, hormone-receptor-negative breast cancer. (Funded by QuantumLeap Healthcare Collaborative and others; I-SPY 2 TRIAL ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT01042379.).

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1533-4406
Volume :
375
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The New England journal of medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
27406346
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa1513750