Disease-free breast cancer survival
improves when herceptin is used concurrently with chemotherapy
Using Herceptin with chemotherapy, instead of after,
clearly improves treatment of women with HER2+ breast cancer, and should be the
new standard of care, says a Mayo Clinic researcher who led what is regarded to
be a key clinical trial determining the best use of Herceptin.
Patients using Herceptin and chemotherapy at the same
time had a relative 25 percent reduction in the risk of recurrence of cancer or
death, compared with women who used Herceptin after chemotherapy, says Edith Perez,
MD, chair, North Central Cancer Treatment Group (NCCTG) Breast Committee and a
breast cancer researcher at the Mayo Clinic campus in Jacksonville, Fla. She presented
the findings of the study at the Cancer Therapy & Research Center-American
Association for Cancer Research (CTRC-AACR) 2009 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.
These findings may have global implications for women
being treated for HER2+ breast cancer, which makes up 20 percent to 25 percent
of all cases, Dr. Perez says.
In the United States, for example, Herceptin is approved
for use on either a sequential or concurrent treatment schedule with adjuvant
chemotherapy (that is, chemotherapy following surgery). In much of the rest of
the world, Herceptin is used sequentially, she says.
"The results of this trial have been eagerly awaited
in the U.S. and in many nations as this is the only trial developed to define
the optimal way to incorporate Herceptin in the context of adjuvant chemotherapy,"
Dr. Perez says. "The goal was to decrease the risk of cancer recurrence, and we
have shown that concurrent use is the best way to achieve that."
"This could mean that up to 10,000 women around the world
each year may have a better outcome if Herceptin is used along with chemotherapy.
Given that, I believe this study will lead to a global re-evaluation of how Herceptin
is used," she says.
Every year, approximately 250,000 women worldwide are eligible to be treated with
Herceptin for invasive HER2+ breast cancer, says Dr. Perez.
Some data on part of the study, the (NCCTG) clinical
trial N9831, have been released before, such as in 2005 in the New England Journal
of Medicine. But this is the first time that mature outcome information on patients
given sequential vs. concurrent treatment is available. The trial enrolled women
who had surgery to treat Stage I-III invasive HER2+ breast cancer.
The study is the only phase III randomized clinical trial
to assess chemotherapy alone (Arm A) versus either sequential (Arm B) or concurrent
(Arm C) incorporation of Herceptin in patients. Chemotherapy used in the study
was doxorubicin and cyclophosphamide then paclitaxel, and was administered for
approximately six months. Herceptin was given for 52 weeks.
Two different comparisons were made in the study. The
first looked at outcomes in Arm A (1,087 women) compared to Arm B (1,097 women)
and found that five-year disease-free survival (defined as no cancer recurrence)
was increased from 72 percent (Arm A) to 80 percent (Arm B). Researchers also
tabulated 222 events (cancer recurrence or death) in Arm A compared to 164 events
in Arm B.
The second comparison looked at 954 women enrolled in
Arm B with 949 women enrolled in Arm C. Researchers found that patients in Arm
C fared the best overall. Their five-year disease-free-survival increased to 84
percent, compared to 80 percent in Arm B.
"The study demonstrated that adding Herceptin clearly
improves disease-free survival, with improvement if given after chemotherapy,
but even more improvement if started concurrent with taxane-based chemotherapy,"
Dr. Perez says. "So, our recommendation for practice and regulatory agencies around
the world is that Herceptin be given concurrent with adjuvant chemotherapy."
This study was conducted as a collaborative effort, with
researchers participating via the National Cancer Institute (NCI)-funded NCCTG,
the Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG), the Cancer and Leukemia Group B
group (CALGB), and the Southwest Oncology Group (SWOG). In addition to NCI support,
funding was also provided by Genentech.
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