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Eribulin With or Without Trastuzumab-biosimilar in Patients With HER2-overexpressed Recurrent or Stage IV Breast Cancer (ESPERO)

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Seoul National University

Status and phase

Enrolling
Phase 2

Conditions

Advanced Breast Cancer

Treatments

Drug: Eribulin Mesylate
Drug: Eribulin Mesylate + Samfenet (Trastruzumab-biosimilar)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05530057
H-1905-141-1035

Details and patient eligibility

About

Optimal salvage treatment for HER2-positive breast cancer after trastuzumab and T-DM1 failure still remains to be established. We would like to investigate the efficacy and safety of combination chemotherapy of eribulin and trastuzumab as salvage treatment for HER2-Positive breast cancer after exposure to trastuzumab and T-DM1

Full description

HER2-targeted therapy is the mainstay therapeutic option for the treatment of HER2 positive breast cancer patients. Even after progression on HER2-targeted therapy, HER2 remains an effective therapeutic target. In a phase III randomized clinical trial, Lapatinib plus capecitabine showed superior outcome compared to capecitabine alone in HER2 positive breast cancer patients who has progressed after trastuzumab-based therapy Moreover, ado-trastuzumab emtansine (T-DM1) showed improved progression free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) in HER2-positive advanced breast cancer patients previously treated with trastuzumab and a taxane.

Not only switching to a different HER2-targeted agent, but rechallenge of trastuzumab has also shown efficacy in trastuzumab failed HER2-positive breast cancer patients. In HER2-positive breast cancer patients who failed trastuzumab and lapatinib, rechallenge of trastuzumab in combination with conventional chemotherapy showed response rate of 31%, PFS of 4.9 months, and OS of 19.4 months.

Eribulin mesylate is a non-taxane inhibitor of microtubule which shows efficacy in HER2-positive breast cancer. The efficacy of eribulin and trastuzumab combination chemotherapy as first line palliative chemotherapy in HER2-positive breast cancer was identified in a phase II trial. Eribulin plus trastuzumab was an effective regimen which showed response rate of 71.2% and PFS of 11.6 months.

Currently, the first line regimen for HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer is combination therapy of pertuzumab, trastuzumab, and docetaxel as a result of the CELOPARTRA trial . After failure on pertuzumab and trastuzumab based combination chemotherapy, T-DM1 is frequently used as a 2nd line therapy. Optimal salvage treatment for HER2-positive breast cancer after trastuzumab and T-DM1 failure still remains to be established. We would like to investigate the efficacy and safety of combination chemotherapy of eribulin and trastuzumab as salvage treatment for HER2-Positive breast cancer after exposure to trastuzumab and T-DM1.

Enrollment

180 estimated patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Adults ≥18 years old.

  • Pathologically documented breast cancer that:

    • is unresectable or metastatic
    • has confirmed HER2 positive expression (immunohistochemistry or FISH) as determined according to American Society of Clinical Oncology - College of American Pathologists guidelines evaluated at a central laboratory
    • was previously treated with trastuzumab, T-DM1 or T-Dxd, and taxane (whether in recurrent/metastatic setting or neoadjuvant/adjuvant setting).
    • Less than 4 prior lines of chemotherapy or HER2 targeted therapies for treatment in metastatic disease (<4 treatment regimens for recurrent/metastatic disease excluding adjuvant treatments)
  • Documented radiologic progression (during or after most recent treatment or within 6 months after completing adjuvant therapy).

  • Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status of 0, or 1

  • Male and female subjects of reproductive/childbearing potential must agree to use a highly effective form of contraception or avoid intercourse during and upon completion of the study and for at least 4.5 months after the last dose of study treatment.

  • Adequate hematopoietic, renal and hepatic functions.

  • Adequate hematopoietic function: Absolute granulocyte count ≥1,500/mm3, platelet≥100,000/mm3, hemoglobin≥10g/mm3

  • Adequate hepatic function: total bilirubin ≤2.0mg/dL, AST/ALT ≤2 x UNL, alkaline phosphatase ≤2.5 x UNL, in case with bone metastases alkaline phosphatase ≤5 x UNL

  • Adequate renal function: Serum creatinine ≤1.5mg/dL

  • a left ventricular ejection fraction of 50% or more (determined by echocardiography or multiple-gated acquisition [MUGA(Multigated Blood Pool Scan)] scanning)

  • CNS(central nervous system) metastasis is permitted if asymptomatic or controlled with minimal steroid requirement and is documented to be non-progressing at study entry.

  • Negative result for urine or serum pregnancy tests within the screening period in premenopausal patients

  • Ability to understand and comply with protocol during study period

  • Patients should sign a written informed consent before study entry

Exclusion criteria

  • Prior treatment with eribulin
  • Uncontrolled or significant cardiovascular disease
  • History of documented congestive heart failure (CHF) or systolic dysfunction (LVEF <50%)
  • High-risk uncontrolled arrhythmias (ventricular tachycardia, high-grade Atrioventricular-block, supraventricular arrhythmias, prolonged QTc(corrected QT interval) which are not adequately rate-controlled)
  • Angina pectoris requiring antianginal medication
  • Clinically significant valvular heart disease
  • Evidence of transmural infarction on ECG
  • Poorly controlled hypertension (e.g. systolic >180mm Hg or diastolic >100mm Hg)
  • Pregnant or lactating women or women of childbearing potential, including women whose last menstrual period was ,12 months ago (unless surgically sterile) who are unable or unwilling to use adequate contraceptive measures during the study treatment period.
  • Patients who have history of cancer other than in situ uterine cervix cancer or nonmelanotic skin cancer and thyroid cancer. For other types of cancer, patients could be included if there is no evidence of disease for more than 2 years.
  • Patients with GI tract disease resulting in an inability to take oral medication, malabsorption syndrome, a requirement for IV alimentation, prior surgical procedures affecting absorption, uncontrolled GI disease (e.g., Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis)
  • Subjects who have current active hepatic or biliary disease (with exception of patients with Gilbert's syndrome, asymptomatic gallstones, liver metastases or stable chronic liver disease per investigator assessment)
  • Concurrent disease or serious medical disorder, for example, active or uncontrolled infection, interstitial lung disease (ILD) or any psychiatric condition prohibiting understanding or rendering of informed consent.
  • Patients who have a known immediate or delayed hypersensitivity reaction or idiosyncrasy to drugs chemically related to any of the study agents or their excipients.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

180 participants in 2 patient groups

Eribulin + SB3
Experimental group
Description:
\- Patients will receive eribulin mesylate 1.4 mg/m2 administered I.V. with infusion over 2 to 5 minutes on days 1 and 8 of each 21-day cycle and SB3 8 mg/kg I.V. over 90 minutes on day 1 of cycle 1 . Thereafter, SB3 6 mg/kg will be infused over 30 minutes on day 1 of each subsequent 21-day cycle until progression or unacceptable toxicity.
Treatment:
Drug: Eribulin Mesylate + Samfenet (Trastruzumab-biosimilar)
Eribulin monotherapy
Active Comparator group
Description:
\- Patients will receive eribulin mesylate 1.4 mg/m2 administered I.V. with infusion over 2 to 5 minutes on days 1 and 8 of each 21-day cycle until progression or unacceptable toxicity.
Treatment:
Drug: Eribulin Mesylate

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Kyunghun Lee, MD,PhD; Seock-Ah Im, MD,PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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