Ado-trastuzumab emtansine, the antibody-drug conjugate more commonly known as T-DM1, demonstrated robust activity in HER2-amplified salivary gland cancer (SGC) within a phase II basket trial, warranting further investigation in this disease (Abstract 6001). Among the 10 patients with SGC treated with T-DM1, nine obtained an objective response, six of which were complete responses.
The median duration of response and median progression-free survival have yet to be reached despite a median follow-up of 12 months (range: 4 to 20 months).
To gain ground in this rare malignancy, researchers are capitalizing on the targetable mutations offered up by the diverse molecular landscape of SGC. HER2 gene amplification identified through next-generation sequencing (NGS) occurs in 8% of patients with SGC and approximately 30% of patients with the aggressive salivary duct carcinoma histologic subtype.1 Based on this information, lead investigator Bob T. Li, MD, MPH, of Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Centre, and colleagues hypothesized that patients with SGC found to be HER2 positive by molecular testing would benefit from T-DM1, which delivers a highly potent maytansine-derived antimitotic agent directly to HER2-bearing cells.
To test this hypothesis, patients with SGC participated in a single-arm basket trial that included several cohorts of patients with HER2-amplified advanced solid cancers. HER2 amplification was defined as a 2-fold or greater increase in HER2 gene copy number using the Memorial Sloan Kettering IMPACT platform or another validated NGS platform, or a HER2/CEP17 FISH ratio of at least 2.0. All patients received treatment with 3.6 mg/kg of intravenous T-DM1 every 3 weeksâthe standard dosing regimenâuntil disease progression or unacceptable toxicity occurred. Responses were determined using the RECIST version 1.1 or the PET Response Criteria in Solid Tumours (PERCIST).
The 10 participants with SGC had a median age of 65 and 90% were male. Notably, these patients had already received a median of two prior systemic therapy regimens, which included HER2-targeted therapy for two patients and anti-androgen therapy for five patients.
Discussant Vanita Noronha, MD, of the Tata Memorial Centre, India, said that T-DM1 holds the potential to change clinical practice. âAdo-trastuzumab emtansine appears to be a good treatment option in patients with HER2-amplified salivary gland tumours,â and she believes the agent fulfills an unmet need.
SGC accounts for only 0.8% of all cancers. Diseases arising in the salivary ducts portend a particularly poor prognosis given its tendency to metastasize and the fact that no approved therapies exist for metastatic SGC.
Because NGS was used to screen patients for study entry, Dr. Li and colleagues felt it important to correlate HER2 gene amplification using this less conventional approach with the more standard FISH and immunohistochemistry (IHC) techniques. They found excellent concordance between the biomarker measures. Among the 10 patients with NGS-identified HER2 amplification (fold-change: 2.8 to s22.8), all eight patients tested had a FISH HER2/CEP17 ratio of at least 2.0, and all 10 patients had a HER2 IHC score of 3+.
The SGC cohort tolerated T-DM1 fairly well. Adverse events included thrombocytopenia (70%), transaminitis (60%), anaemia (20%), maculopapular rash (20%), and anorexia (10%), and all of these events were grade 1 or 2 in severity except for one case of grade 3 thrombocytopenia.
The plan now is to enroll 14 additional patients with SGC to expand the T-DM1 dataset, according to Dr. Li. âThere are patients in need of this treatment. That is certainly the priorityâto further accrue patients, complete the trial, publish the data, and hopefully have this treatment approved to benefit all patients,â he said.
Both Dr. Li and Dr. Noronha acknowledged that it would be nearly impossible to conduct a randomized controlled trial of T-DM1 given the rarity of SGC. Dr. Li said it took 2 years to enroll 10 patients with SGC in the basket trial, so a larger undertaking beyond the plan to enroll 24 total patients would prove challenging. He feels that T-DM1 will still be approved based on this small sample size, as has occurred with other agents in rare diseases.
- Zehir A, et al. Nat Med . 2017;23:703-13.
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Table of Contents: ASCO 2019
Featured articles
Endocrine therapy plus ribociclib yields overall survival advantage in HR+/HER2-negative breast cancer
Breast Cancer
Endocrine therapy plus ribociclib yields overall survival advantage in HR+/HER2-negative breast cancer
Biomarker analysis predicts response to adjuvant trastuzumab, pertuzumab in HER2+ breast cancer
Melanoma
Nivolumab-mediated adverse events are independent of efficacy in resected advanced melanoma
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Sarcoma
Olaratumab trial in soft tissue sarcoma fails to meet overall survival endpoint
Gastrointestinal Cancers
FOLFOXIRI plus bevacizumab an option for patients with mCRC and poor prognosis
KEYNOTE-062: Pembrolizumab combination fails to improve survival in gastric/GEJ cancer
Neoadjuvant chemotherapy as a potential treatment option in colon cancer
Laparascopic surgery; less morbidity, same survival benefits as open surgery in colorectal cancer with liver metastases
Maintenance olaparib improved PFS in patients with BRCA+ pancreatic cancer
Hematologic Malignancies
Daratumumab a promising treatment option for transplant-eligible multiple myeloma
Paediatric Oncology
Entrectinib produces rapid and durable responses in children with refractory CNS and solid tumours
Head and Neck Cancer
Ado-trastuzumab emtansine a potential new treatment option for HER2-amplified advanced salivary gland cancer
Sentinel lymph node biopsy shows promise for early oral cancer
Genitourinary Cancer - Prostate Cancer
Enzalutamide offers survival advantage over other NSAAs in mHSPC
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Neoadjuvant nivolumab/ipilimumab shows promise in resectable NSCLC
Overcoming the challenges of immunotherapy in nonâsmall cell lung cancer
Repotrectinib shows encouraging safety, efficacy for patients with ROS1+ NSCLC
Pembrolizumab monotherapy leads to 5-year survival in some patients with NSCLC
Novel RET inhibitor BLU-667 offers promise for RET+ advanced NSCLC
Lurbinectedin shows promise as second-line therapy for SCLC
Early results from TAK-788 in NSCLC with EGFR exon 20 insertions
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