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About
The advent of CDK4/6 inhibitors (drugs designed to block the action of CDK4/6 proteins, which play a key role in cell proliferation) has improved treatment prospects for patients with metastatic breast cancer whose tumour cells express hormone receptors but not the HER2 protein (HR+/HER2-). The NATALEE study showed that the addition of ribociclib for three years to conventional adjuvant hormone therapy (i.e. after surgery) prolonged survival free of invasive disease (i.e. extending to surrounding tissues) in patients with early HR breast cancer+ /HER2-. Unlike other studies, NATALEE included a group of patients at intermediate risk of recurrence, usually treated with adjuvant chemotherapy before receiving hormone therapy. However, the benefit of adjuvant chemotherapy in these patients is uncertain. The hypothesis of the NoLEEta study is that by using the CDK 4/6 inhibitor, patients could avoid adjuvant chemotherapy and therefore be spared the side-effects associated with this chemotherapy, without reducing the efficacy of the treatment.
Full description
The advent of CDK4/6 inhibitors has changed the outlook of patients with metastatic hormone receptor-positive (HR+) HER2- breast cancer. Moreover, including CDK4/6 inhibitors in the adjuvant treatment regimens strategies has led to significant gains in disease-free survival.
The phase III NATALEE trial demonstrated the efficacy of an adjuvant three-year treatment with ribociclib in prolonging invasive disease-free survival (iDFS) in patients with intermediate and high-risk HR+ HER2- early breast cancer.
Contrarily to similar studies of CDK4/6 inhibitors in this setting, NATALEE included a group of patients with intermediate clinical risk (pT1-2 pN1, pT3-4 pN0 or pT2 pN0 with histological grade 3 or grade 2 with Ki67≥ 20%). These patients are usually considered for adjuvant chemotherapy based on their clinicopathological conditions or the results of a genomic signature (e.g. Oncotype Dx). Nevertheless, the benefit of adjuvant chemotherapy in these patients is uncertain (and likely small) in the context of an adjuvant treatment strategy that includes a CDK 4/6 inhibitor.
As such, a de-escalation trial could demonstrate that patients with intermediate-risk breast cancer treated with CDK4/6 inhibitors could be spared the dreaded chemotherapy side effects while ensuring similar survival outcomes.
In order to be generalizable and practice changing, a trial in this setting should aim to be as pragmatic as possible, particularly in inclusion criteria, with the required resources for patient inclusion and delivery of care being as similar as possible to those employed in usual care. As such, chemotherapy eligibility should be defined similarly to routine clinical practice in the participating centers (i.e. using routine clinicopathological parameters and/or genomic signatures).
While single-arm designs could help address non-inferiority in the previously mentioned setting, they are usually compared to historical controls and lack external validation. Moreover, in some settings, like early breast cancer, the standard of care may change relatively quickly (e.g. Oncotype Dx-based chemotherapy de-escalation or adjuvant CDK4/6 inhibitors use), rendering the comparison to historical controls challenging, limiting the study conclusions and their impact on clinical practice. Finally, there is no consensus on the optimal non-inferiority threshold in single-arm trials using historical controls as a comparator. As such, randomized controlled non-inferiority trials with a strict non-inferiority margin remain the gold standard design to prove that a de-escalated treatment regimen is safe and advantageous, and the only ones capable of producing level IA evidence according to ESMO (Trapani et al., Annals of Oncology 2022).
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Inclusion criteria
Patient must have signed a written informed consent prior to any trial-specific screening procedure.
Note: When the patient is physically unable to give their written consent, an impartial witness of their choice, independent from the investigator or the sponsor, can confirm in writing the patient's consent.
Patient is ≥ 18 years old.
Patient is female with known menopausal status at the time of randomization.
Post-menopausal status is defined as:
The following criteria must be met for histologically confirmed invasive breast carcinoma, as determined by the local pathologist:
Note: Multifocal and multicentric tumors are allowed if they meet the clinical stage II criteria of the 8th Edition of the AJCC. All tumors must be ER-positive and HER2-negative. Patients with bilateral invasive breast cancer (diagnosed simultaneously or within 6 months of each other) are eligible if all lesions tested on both sides are ER+ (ie, ≥10% positive stained cells) and HER2- AND adequate surgery has been performed in both breasts.
Chemotherapy eligible per investigator decision, based on clinicopathological findings or the results of any genomic signature.
Patient has no contraindication for the adjuvant endocrine therapy (ET) or chemotherapy in the trial and is planned to be treated with ET for 5 years (after randomization date) or more.
Curative surgery for the invasive disease must have been performed with negative surgical margins within 12 weeks before randomization. If positive surgical margins, patients are eligible if revision surgery or other adequate local treatment (i.e local radiotherapy) is planned.
Women of childbearing potential (CBP) must have a confirmed negative serum pregnancy test (β-hCG) before starting study treatment.
Women of childbearing potential must agree to use one effective form of contraception during trial treatment and up to 21 days after the last dose of study drugs or longer, if required per standard of care;
Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status of 0 to 1 within 28 days prior to randomization.
Adequate hematological, renal, and hepatic function, as outlined below:
Standard 12-lead ECG values assessed, as:
Patient must be willing and able to comply with scheduled visits, treatment plans, laboratory tests, and other trial procedures.
Absence of any psychological, familial or geographical condition potentially hampering compliance with the study protocol and follow-up schedule; those conditions should be discussed with the patient before registration in the trial.
Patients must be affiliated to a Social Security System (or equivalent) based on local regulations.
Exclusion criteria
Patient has received any neoadjuvant chemotherapy since her breast cancer diagnosis or has received any prior CDK4/6 inhibitor.
Breast cancer diagnosed while patient was receiving tamoxifen, raloxifene or aromatase inhibitors (AIs) for reduction in risk ("chemoprevention") of breast cancer and/or treatment for osteoporosis within the last 2 years prior to randomization.
Patient with a known hypersensitivity to any of the excipients of ribociclib and/or ET (e.g. rare hereditary problems of galactose intolerance, the Lapp lactase deficiency, glucose-galactose malabsorption, and soy or peanut allergy).
Patient with evidence or history of distant metastases of breast cancer beyond regional lymph nodes (stage IV according to AJCC 8th edition), inflammatory breast cancer, breast cancer recurrence (local or distant) or a different primary breast cancer.
Patient has a concurrent invasive malignancy or a prior invasive malignancy whose treatment was completed within 2 years before randomization. Note: Patients with adequately treated basal or squamous cell skin carcinoma or curatively resected cervical cancer in situ are eligible.
Patients whose breast cancer is considered as endocrine therapy insensitive, as determined by investigator's opinion; this may include (but is not limited to) breast cancer classified as " basal like " by molecular signatures (if available in the patient file) and/or breast cancer with persistently high proliferation after pre-operative endocrine therapy.
Patient has had major surgery within 14 days prior to study treatment initiation.
Patient has known history of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection (testing is not mandatory) whose antiretroviral therapy (ART) has a known strong CYP3A4 inhibitor with potential for DDI with ribociclib. Patients with HIV may be enrolled if they fulfil the criteria recommended by FDA and ASCO guidelines (FDA Guidance, Uldrick et al. 2017):
Patient has known active hepatitis B virus (HBV) or hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection (testing is not mandatory).
Clinically significant, uncontrolled heart disease and/or cardiac repolarization abnormality, including any of the following:
History of documented myocardial infarction (MI), angina pectoris, symptomatic pericarditis, or coronary artery bypass graft within 6 months prior to trial entry.
Documented cardiomyopathy.
Left Ventricular Ejection Fraction (LVEF) < 50% as determined by Multiple Gated acquisition (MUGA) scan or echocardiogram (ECHO) (testing not mandatory)
Long QT syndrome or family history of idiopathic sudden death or congenital long QT syndrome, or any of the following:
Clinically significant cardiac arrhythmias (e.g. ventricular tachycardia), complete left bundle branch block, high-grade Atrioventricular (AV) block (e.g. bifascicular block, Mobitz type II and third degree AV block).
Uncontrolled arterial hypertension with systolic blood pressure >160 mmHg.
Presence of any other medical conditions, including respiratory or metabolic dysfunction, physical examination findings, or laboratory results that raise reasonable suspicion of a contraindication to the use of an experimental drug, potential impact on compliance with the study protocol, influence on result interpretation, or increased risk of treatment complications for the patients (such as severe dyspnea at rest or requiring oxygen therapy, history of major surgical resection involving the stomach or small bowel, preexisting Crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis, or a preexisting chronic condition resulting in clinically significant diarrhea).
Previous history of pneumonitis, regardless of cause.
Patient is currently receiving any of the following substances within 7 days before randomization and which cannot be stopped within seven days prior to the start of treatment:
Patient is concurrently using hormone replacement therapy. Estrogen replacement therapy discontinued less than two weeks prior to the start of treatment.
Patient is currently receiving or has received systemic corticosteroids ≤ 2 weeks prior to starting trial treatment, or has not fully recovered from side effects of such treatment.
Note: The following uses of corticosteroids are permitted: a short duration (<5 days) of systemic corticosteroids; any duration of topical applications (e.g. for rash), inhaled sprays (e.g. for obstructive airways diseases), eye drops or local injections (e.g. intra-articular).
Patient has any other concurrent severe and/or uncontrolled medical condition that would, in the Investigator's judgment, cause unacceptable safety risks, contraindicate patient participation in the clinical trial or compromise compliance with the protocol (e.g. chronic pancreatitis, chronic active hepatitis, liver cirrhosis or any other significant liver disease, active untreated or uncontrolled fungal, bacterial or viral infections, active infection requiring systemic anti-bacterial therapy, etc.) or limit life expectancy to ≤5 years.
Participation in other studies involving investigational drug(s) within 30 days prior to randomization or within 5 half-lives of the investigational drug(s) (whichever is longer), or participation in any other type of medical research judged not to be scientifically or medically compatible with this trial. If the patient is enrolled or planned to be enrolled in another study that does not involve an investigational drug, the agreement of the sponsor is required to establish eligibility.
Inability or unwillingness to swallow oral pills.
Presence of malabsorption syndrome or any other condition that could hinder the absorption of study drugs in the gastrointestinal tract.
Any psychological, familial, sociological, or geographical factors that may impede adherence to the study protocol and follow-up schedule.
Pregnant or breast-feeding (lactating) women or women who plan to become pregnant or breast-feed during the first 48 months of adjuvant therapy.
Persons deprived of their liberty or under protective custody or guardianship.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
3,902 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Sandrine Marques
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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