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Approximately 35% of triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) have an alteration in the PI3K/AKT/PTEN pathway which regulates growth, survival and proliferation. Results from IPATunity130 cohort A showed no PFS difference with ipatasertib (AKT inhibitor)/paclitaxel compared to paclitaxel alone (7.4 versus 6.1 months; HR 1.02, p=0.9237) in patients with advanced TNBC and PIK3CA/AKT1/PTEN alteration. These results contrast with two phase II trials which showed OS and PFS benefit with addition of an AKT inhibitor to paclitaxel in the first-line metastatic TNBC setting. In IPATunity130 cohort A, there is an intriguing signal in the PD-L1 subgroup, although numbers are small and a proportion have unknown PD-L1 status. Further investigation into other relevant biomarkers that may predict ipatasertib benefit in TNBC, mechanisms of resistance, and combination therapies may shed light on the future role of AKT/PI3K inhibitors in breast cancer.
Breast cancer patients treated with curative intent do not often experience symptoms related to the cancer itself, and treatment toxicities may impact adherence and subsequently prognosis. Mittendorf et al reported on patient reported outcomes (PROs) from the phase 3 IMpassion031 trial which showed pCR improvement with atezolizumab/chemotherapy compared to placebo/chemotherapy for neoadjuvant early-stage TNBC. Health-related quality of life items and treatment-related symptoms worsened similarly in both arms during neoadjuvant therapy, and recovered/stabilized in the adjuvant setting. Further exploration of immunotherapy PROs is warranted, as clinical benefit is seen with these agents and they do not appear to negatively impact functioning and patient experience with treatment long-term. Side effect profiles of immunotherapy and standard chemotherapy are different, and design of immunotherapy-specific PROs are desired.
The PRIME 2 10 year results evaluating the role of whole breast irradiation in women ≥65 years with early-stage HR-positive breast cancer receiving hormonal therapy showed RT reduced risk of local recurrence from 9.8% to 0.9% at 10 years (p=0.0008). Patients with low ER tumors had higher 10 year local recurrence rate compared to high ER tumors (18.8% versus 9.2% (p0.007)). Rates of overall survival (80.4% in no RT group vs 81.0% in RT group) and metastasis free survival were similar. A shared decision making approach is key, carefully weighing benefits and risks, considering pathologic features, patient preferences and co-morbidities that may influence endocrine therapy adherence. The impact of molecular subtypes and genomic assays is also being explored to help assess radiation benefit and guide treatment recommendations.
Breast cancer in young women presents unique challenges considering the lifetime period during which diagnosis occurs. Previous studies have supported the safety of pregnancy after breast cancer and guidelines recommend oncofertility counseling in young patients. Blondeaux et al found that breast cancer patients had a 60% lower chance of pregnancy after treatment and were more likely to have complications including low birth weight, small for gestational age, preterm delivery and cesarean section. Although increased risk of congenital abnormalities did not appear to be statistically significant, the HR was 1.63. Importantly, pregnancy after breast cancer did not negatively impact maternal outcomes. This study further supports the safety of pregnancy after breast cancer, highlights the need for close monitoring of pregnancies in these women, and emphasizes the importance of fertility and family planning discussion, which is most optimally provided in a multidisciplinary fashion.
References:
Dent R, Oliveira AM, Isakoff SJ, Im SA, Espié M, Blau S, Saura C, Wongchenko MJ, Xu N, Bradley D, Reilly SJ, Mani A, Kim SB. Final results of the double-blind placebo (PBO)-controlled randomised phase II LOTUS trial of first-line ipatasertib (IPAT) + paclitaxel (PAC) for inoperable locally advanced/metastatic triple-negative breast cancer (mTNBC). Presented during 2020 ESMO breast cancer virtual meeting; May 23-24, 2020. Abstract 139O.
Schmid P, Abraham J, Chan S, Wheatley D, Brunt AM, Nemsadze G, Baird RD, Park YH, Hall PS, Perren T, Stein RC, Mangel L, Ferrero JM, Phillips M, Conibear J, Cortes J, Foxley A, de Bruin EC, McEwen R, Stetson D, Dougherty B, Sarker SJ, Prendergast A, McLaughlin-Callan M, Burgess M, Lawrence C, Cartwright H, Mousa K, Turner NC. Capivasertib plus paclitaxel versus placebo plus paclitaxel as first-line therapy for metastatic triple-negative breast cancer: the PAKT trial. J Clin Oncol. 2020;38:423-433.
Mittendorf EA, Zhang H, Barrios CH, Saji S, Jung KH, Hegg R, Koehler A, Sohn J, Iwata H, Telli ML, Ferrario C, Punie K, Penault-Llorca F, Patel S, Duc AN, Liste-Hermoso M, Maiya V, Molinero L, Chui SY, Harbeck N. Neoadjuvant atezolizumab in combination with sequential nab-paclitaxel and anthracycline-based chemotherapy versus placebo and chemotherapy in patients with early-stage triple-negative breast cancer (IMpassion031): a randomised, double-blind, phase 3 trial. Lancet. 2020;396:1090-1100.
King-Kallimanis BL, Howie LJ, Roydhouse JK, Singh H, Theoret MR, Blumenthal GM, Kluetz PG. Patient reported outcomes in anti-PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitor immunotherapy registration trials: FDA analysis of data submitted and future directions. Clin Trials. 2019;16:322-326.
Fodor A, Brombin C, Mangili P, Borroni F, Pasetti M, Tummineri R, Zerbetto F, Longobardi B, Perna L, Dell'Oca I, Deantoni CL, Deli AM, Chiara A, Broggi S, Castriconi R, Esposito PG, Slim N, Passoni P, Baroni S, Villa SL, Rancoita PMV, Fiorino C, Del Vecchio A, Bianchini G, Gentilini OD, Di Serio MS, Di Muzio NG. Impact of molecular subtype on 1325 early-stage breast cancer patients homogeneously treated with hypofractionated radiotherapy without boost: Should the indications for radiotherapy be more personalized? Breast. 2020;55:45-54.
Azim HA Jr, Santoro L, Pavlidis N, Gelber S, Kroman N, Azim H, Peccatori FA. Safety of pregnancy following breast cancer diagnosis: a meta-analysis of 14 studies. Eur J Cancer. 2011;47:74-83.
Approximately 35% of triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) have an alteration in the PI3K/AKT/PTEN pathway which regulates growth, survival and proliferation. Results from IPATunity130 cohort A showed no PFS difference with ipatasertib (AKT inhibitor)/paclitaxel compared to paclitaxel alone (7.4 versus 6.1 months; HR 1.02, p=0.9237) in patients with advanced TNBC and PIK3CA/AKT1/PTEN alteration. These results contrast with two phase II trials which showed OS and PFS benefit with addition of an AKT inhibitor to paclitaxel in the first-line metastatic TNBC setting. In IPATunity130 cohort A, there is an intriguing signal in the PD-L1 subgroup, although numbers are small and a proportion have unknown PD-L1 status. Further investigation into other relevant biomarkers that may predict ipatasertib benefit in TNBC, mechanisms of resistance, and combination therapies may shed light on the future role of AKT/PI3K inhibitors in breast cancer.
Breast cancer patients treated with curative intent do not often experience symptoms related to the cancer itself, and treatment toxicities may impact adherence and subsequently prognosis. Mittendorf et al reported on patient reported outcomes (PROs) from the phase 3 IMpassion031 trial which showed pCR improvement with atezolizumab/chemotherapy compared to placebo/chemotherapy for neoadjuvant early-stage TNBC. Health-related quality of life items and treatment-related symptoms worsened similarly in both arms during neoadjuvant therapy, and recovered/stabilized in the adjuvant setting. Further exploration of immunotherapy PROs is warranted, as clinical benefit is seen with these agents and they do not appear to negatively impact functioning and patient experience with treatment long-term. Side effect profiles of immunotherapy and standard chemotherapy are different, and design of immunotherapy-specific PROs are desired.
The PRIME 2 10 year results evaluating the role of whole breast irradiation in women ≥65 years with early-stage HR-positive breast cancer receiving hormonal therapy showed RT reduced risk of local recurrence from 9.8% to 0.9% at 10 years (p=0.0008). Patients with low ER tumors had higher 10 year local recurrence rate compared to high ER tumors (18.8% versus 9.2% (p0.007)). Rates of overall survival (80.4% in no RT group vs 81.0% in RT group) and metastasis free survival were similar. A shared decision making approach is key, carefully weighing benefits and risks, considering pathologic features, patient preferences and co-morbidities that may influence endocrine therapy adherence. The impact of molecular subtypes and genomic assays is also being explored to help assess radiation benefit and guide treatment recommendations.
Breast cancer in young women presents unique challenges considering the lifetime period during which diagnosis occurs. Previous studies have supported the safety of pregnancy after breast cancer and guidelines recommend oncofertility counseling in young patients. Blondeaux et al found that breast cancer patients had a 60% lower chance of pregnancy after treatment and were more likely to have complications including low birth weight, small for gestational age, preterm delivery and cesarean section. Although increased risk of congenital abnormalities did not appear to be statistically significant, the HR was 1.63. Importantly, pregnancy after breast cancer did not negatively impact maternal outcomes. This study further supports the safety of pregnancy after breast cancer, highlights the need for close monitoring of pregnancies in these women, and emphasizes the importance of fertility and family planning discussion, which is most optimally provided in a multidisciplinary fashion.
References:
Dent R, Oliveira AM, Isakoff SJ, Im SA, Espié M, Blau S, Saura C, Wongchenko MJ, Xu N, Bradley D, Reilly SJ, Mani A, Kim SB. Final results of the double-blind placebo (PBO)-controlled randomised phase II LOTUS trial of first-line ipatasertib (IPAT) + paclitaxel (PAC) for inoperable locally advanced/metastatic triple-negative breast cancer (mTNBC). Presented during 2020 ESMO breast cancer virtual meeting; May 23-24, 2020. Abstract 139O.
Schmid P, Abraham J, Chan S, Wheatley D, Brunt AM, Nemsadze G, Baird RD, Park YH, Hall PS, Perren T, Stein RC, Mangel L, Ferrero JM, Phillips M, Conibear J, Cortes J, Foxley A, de Bruin EC, McEwen R, Stetson D, Dougherty B, Sarker SJ, Prendergast A, McLaughlin-Callan M, Burgess M, Lawrence C, Cartwright H, Mousa K, Turner NC. Capivasertib plus paclitaxel versus placebo plus paclitaxel as first-line therapy for metastatic triple-negative breast cancer: the PAKT trial. J Clin Oncol. 2020;38:423-433.
Mittendorf EA, Zhang H, Barrios CH, Saji S, Jung KH, Hegg R, Koehler A, Sohn J, Iwata H, Telli ML, Ferrario C, Punie K, Penault-Llorca F, Patel S, Duc AN, Liste-Hermoso M, Maiya V, Molinero L, Chui SY, Harbeck N. Neoadjuvant atezolizumab in combination with sequential nab-paclitaxel and anthracycline-based chemotherapy versus placebo and chemotherapy in patients with early-stage triple-negative breast cancer (IMpassion031): a randomised, double-blind, phase 3 trial. Lancet. 2020;396:1090-1100.
King-Kallimanis BL, Howie LJ, Roydhouse JK, Singh H, Theoret MR, Blumenthal GM, Kluetz PG. Patient reported outcomes in anti-PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitor immunotherapy registration trials: FDA analysis of data submitted and future directions. Clin Trials. 2019;16:322-326.
Fodor A, Brombin C, Mangili P, Borroni F, Pasetti M, Tummineri R, Zerbetto F, Longobardi B, Perna L, Dell'Oca I, Deantoni CL, Deli AM, Chiara A, Broggi S, Castriconi R, Esposito PG, Slim N, Passoni P, Baroni S, Villa SL, Rancoita PMV, Fiorino C, Del Vecchio A, Bianchini G, Gentilini OD, Di Serio MS, Di Muzio NG. Impact of molecular subtype on 1325 early-stage breast cancer patients homogeneously treated with hypofractionated radiotherapy without boost: Should the indications for radiotherapy be more personalized? Breast. 2020;55:45-54.
Azim HA Jr, Santoro L, Pavlidis N, Gelber S, Kroman N, Azim H, Peccatori FA. Safety of pregnancy following breast cancer diagnosis: a meta-analysis of 14 studies. Eur J Cancer. 2011;47:74-83.
Approximately 35% of triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) have an alteration in the PI3K/AKT/PTEN pathway which regulates growth, survival and proliferation. Results from IPATunity130 cohort A showed no PFS difference with ipatasertib (AKT inhibitor)/paclitaxel compared to paclitaxel alone (7.4 versus 6.1 months; HR 1.02, p=0.9237) in patients with advanced TNBC and PIK3CA/AKT1/PTEN alteration. These results contrast with two phase II trials which showed OS and PFS benefit with addition of an AKT inhibitor to paclitaxel in the first-line metastatic TNBC setting. In IPATunity130 cohort A, there is an intriguing signal in the PD-L1 subgroup, although numbers are small and a proportion have unknown PD-L1 status. Further investigation into other relevant biomarkers that may predict ipatasertib benefit in TNBC, mechanisms of resistance, and combination therapies may shed light on the future role of AKT/PI3K inhibitors in breast cancer.
Breast cancer patients treated with curative intent do not often experience symptoms related to the cancer itself, and treatment toxicities may impact adherence and subsequently prognosis. Mittendorf et al reported on patient reported outcomes (PROs) from the phase 3 IMpassion031 trial which showed pCR improvement with atezolizumab/chemotherapy compared to placebo/chemotherapy for neoadjuvant early-stage TNBC. Health-related quality of life items and treatment-related symptoms worsened similarly in both arms during neoadjuvant therapy, and recovered/stabilized in the adjuvant setting. Further exploration of immunotherapy PROs is warranted, as clinical benefit is seen with these agents and they do not appear to negatively impact functioning and patient experience with treatment long-term. Side effect profiles of immunotherapy and standard chemotherapy are different, and design of immunotherapy-specific PROs are desired.
The PRIME 2 10 year results evaluating the role of whole breast irradiation in women ≥65 years with early-stage HR-positive breast cancer receiving hormonal therapy showed RT reduced risk of local recurrence from 9.8% to 0.9% at 10 years (p=0.0008). Patients with low ER tumors had higher 10 year local recurrence rate compared to high ER tumors (18.8% versus 9.2% (p0.007)). Rates of overall survival (80.4% in no RT group vs 81.0% in RT group) and metastasis free survival were similar. A shared decision making approach is key, carefully weighing benefits and risks, considering pathologic features, patient preferences and co-morbidities that may influence endocrine therapy adherence. The impact of molecular subtypes and genomic assays is also being explored to help assess radiation benefit and guide treatment recommendations.
Breast cancer in young women presents unique challenges considering the lifetime period during which diagnosis occurs. Previous studies have supported the safety of pregnancy after breast cancer and guidelines recommend oncofertility counseling in young patients. Blondeaux et al found that breast cancer patients had a 60% lower chance of pregnancy after treatment and were more likely to have complications including low birth weight, small for gestational age, preterm delivery and cesarean section. Although increased risk of congenital abnormalities did not appear to be statistically significant, the HR was 1.63. Importantly, pregnancy after breast cancer did not negatively impact maternal outcomes. This study further supports the safety of pregnancy after breast cancer, highlights the need for close monitoring of pregnancies in these women, and emphasizes the importance of fertility and family planning discussion, which is most optimally provided in a multidisciplinary fashion.
References:
Dent R, Oliveira AM, Isakoff SJ, Im SA, Espié M, Blau S, Saura C, Wongchenko MJ, Xu N, Bradley D, Reilly SJ, Mani A, Kim SB. Final results of the double-blind placebo (PBO)-controlled randomised phase II LOTUS trial of first-line ipatasertib (IPAT) + paclitaxel (PAC) for inoperable locally advanced/metastatic triple-negative breast cancer (mTNBC). Presented during 2020 ESMO breast cancer virtual meeting; May 23-24, 2020. Abstract 139O.
Schmid P, Abraham J, Chan S, Wheatley D, Brunt AM, Nemsadze G, Baird RD, Park YH, Hall PS, Perren T, Stein RC, Mangel L, Ferrero JM, Phillips M, Conibear J, Cortes J, Foxley A, de Bruin EC, McEwen R, Stetson D, Dougherty B, Sarker SJ, Prendergast A, McLaughlin-Callan M, Burgess M, Lawrence C, Cartwright H, Mousa K, Turner NC. Capivasertib plus paclitaxel versus placebo plus paclitaxel as first-line therapy for metastatic triple-negative breast cancer: the PAKT trial. J Clin Oncol. 2020;38:423-433.
Mittendorf EA, Zhang H, Barrios CH, Saji S, Jung KH, Hegg R, Koehler A, Sohn J, Iwata H, Telli ML, Ferrario C, Punie K, Penault-Llorca F, Patel S, Duc AN, Liste-Hermoso M, Maiya V, Molinero L, Chui SY, Harbeck N. Neoadjuvant atezolizumab in combination with sequential nab-paclitaxel and anthracycline-based chemotherapy versus placebo and chemotherapy in patients with early-stage triple-negative breast cancer (IMpassion031): a randomised, double-blind, phase 3 trial. Lancet. 2020;396:1090-1100.
King-Kallimanis BL, Howie LJ, Roydhouse JK, Singh H, Theoret MR, Blumenthal GM, Kluetz PG. Patient reported outcomes in anti-PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitor immunotherapy registration trials: FDA analysis of data submitted and future directions. Clin Trials. 2019;16:322-326.
Fodor A, Brombin C, Mangili P, Borroni F, Pasetti M, Tummineri R, Zerbetto F, Longobardi B, Perna L, Dell'Oca I, Deantoni CL, Deli AM, Chiara A, Broggi S, Castriconi R, Esposito PG, Slim N, Passoni P, Baroni S, Villa SL, Rancoita PMV, Fiorino C, Del Vecchio A, Bianchini G, Gentilini OD, Di Serio MS, Di Muzio NG. Impact of molecular subtype on 1325 early-stage breast cancer patients homogeneously treated with hypofractionated radiotherapy without boost: Should the indications for radiotherapy be more personalized? Breast. 2020;55:45-54.
Azim HA Jr, Santoro L, Pavlidis N, Gelber S, Kroman N, Azim H, Peccatori FA. Safety of pregnancy following breast cancer diagnosis: a meta-analysis of 14 studies. Eur J Cancer. 2011;47:74-83.