Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
The Investigators hypothesize that single agent lenvatinib has biological activity in estrogen receptor positive breast cancer, and that the effects are more pronounced in patients with positive RET expression in the tumor.
Full description
Background and Rationale of Study:
A. RET and Endocrine Resistance in Breast Cancer RET is an estrogen response gene, and preclinical studies have demonstrated cross talk between RET and ER. Significant interactions between RET and ERα pathways have been described, with increased response to estrogen stimulation observed in the presence of functional RET. RET is associated with resistance to tamoxifen and aromatase inhibitors, and increased RET expression has been demonstrated in hormone resistant cell lines and primary tumors.Combined anti-estrogen and anti-RET therapy in luminal breast cancer had a greater effect on cell growth than either therapy alone. The two classes of drugs have different mechanisms of action; a RET TKI reduced growth through induction of apoptosis, while anti-ERα reduced cell proliferation, forming the biologic basis for dual treatment.Dual therapy with tamoxifen and vandetinib, a RET inhibitor, resulted in greater reduction in tumor growth rate in MCF7 xenografts in mice.RET has been reported to be over-expressed in up to 75% of ER+ breast cancers (n=20), compared to only 10% of ER-negative breast cancers (n=10) in a small study. Recently, the investigators tested 94 archival breast cancer specimens from the National University Hospital, Singapore and found RET over-expression (2-3+) to be present in 59% of ER negative breast cancers (n=39) and 62% of ER positive breast cancers (n=55)
There is limited clinical experience in combining RET inhibitors with endocrine therapy in breast cancer, with only one reported study using vandetanib. In this study, 127 post-menopausal metastatic breast cancer patients with hormone receptor-positive, bone-predominant disease, were randomized to fulvestrant alone versus fulvestrant combined with vandetanib. No differences in clinical benefit rate, progression-free survival, or overall survival, were noted between the two treatment groups. Vandetanib, however, is a less potent inhibitor of RET than lenvatinib. Lenvatinib has been granted orphan drug designation for thyroid cancer by the United States Food and Drug Administration in 2013, but is not being actively developed in breast cancer.
The investigators tested 9 ER+ breast cancer cell lines for RET expression using Western blot, and identified 4 with high expression (BT474, MB361, HCC1419, UACC812), 2 with normal expression (MCF7, CAMA1), and 3 with low expression (T47D, ZR-75-1, BT483). To evaluate the effects of combining lenvatinib with endocrine therapy in ER+ breast cancer cell lines with different RET expression, the investigators performed experiments using 6 cell lines, including 2 with high RET expression (BT474, MB361), 2 with normal RET expression (MCF7, CAMA1), and 2 with low RET expression (T47D, ZR-75-1). IC50 to tamoxifen and lenvatinib alone was established for each cell line, followed by combination therapy at 3 different doses for each drug. Cell apoptosis and proliferation was measured using caspase 3/7 and MTT assays respectively. Preliminary experiments showed lenvatinib to have activity in ER positive breast cancer cell lines, regardless of levels of RET expression. Lenvatinib was at least additive with tamoxifen in all 6 ER positive breast cancer cell lines tested, with the combination resulting in ≥50% cell kill compared to single agent tamoxifen in BT474, CAMA1, and T47D cell lines. These pre-clinical observations suggest the potential role of lenvatinib in combination with endocrine therapy in the treatment of ER positive breast cancers.
Cells were seeded on 96-well plates and after 24 hours, the cells were treated with tamoxifen and lenvatinib simultaneously at different doses (tamoxifen at 0, 1, or 5µM, lenvatinib at 0, 5, 10 µM) and incubated for 72 hours. Cell viability was assessed using CCK-8 assay.
B. Preliminary observation of clinical activity of single agent lenvatinib in hormone receptor positive breast cancer
The investigators previously hypothesized that combining a RET inhibitor such as lenvatinib with endocrine therapy may potentiate anti-tumor effects in hormone receptor positive breast cancers. The investigators have recently initiated a study of lenvatinib + letrozole as neoadjuvant therapy in hormone receptor positive breast cancer patients. Eligible patients were treated with two weeks of single agent lenvatinib, followed by 12 weeks of lenvatinib + letrozole. Two patients have been enrolled and the investigators observed tumor reduction of 10-15% on ultrasound after 2 weeks of single agent lenvatinib. To confirm these interesting observations, the investigators intend to treat a larger cohort of patients with newly diagnosed early stage breast cancer who are awaiting definitive breast cancer surgery with approximately 2 weeks of single agent lenvatinib using a window-of-opportunity design, and evaluate tumor response on ultrasound and histological changes from pre- and post-treatment tumor biopsies. This design will allow the investigators to expand the target population for rapid enrollment to achieve a quick signal on biological activity of lenvatinib in human breast cancers in vivo.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Patients must fulfill ALL the following inclusion criteria
Female ≥18 years
Histological or cytological diagnosis of breast carcinoma
No prior treatment for current breast carcinoma
Scheduled for upfront definitive breast cancer surgery (breast conserving surgery or mastectomy with or without sentinel lymph node biopsy or axillary lymph node clearance)
Estrogen receptor positive (>1%)
Adequate bone marrow, renal and liver function
Adequate organ function including the following:
Bone marrow:
Hepatic:
Renal:
Normal thyroid function
Able to swallow pills
Able to sign informed consent
Able to comply with study-related procedures
Exclusion criteria
Patients will be excluded from the study for any of the following reasons:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
30 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Central trial contact
Soo Chin Lee
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal