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Cardiovascular effects of breast cancer treatment vary based on weight, menopausal status
For example, certain chemotherapy drugs may confer higher risk in breast cancer survivors of normal weight, whereas they may lower stroke risk in those who are obese, according to Heather Greenlee, ND, PhD, a public health researcher and naturopathic physician with the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle.
In postmenopausal women with breast cancer, aromatase inhibitors may increase cardiovascular risk, while tamoxifen appears to reduce the risk of incident dyslipidemia, she said.
The findings are from separate analyses of data from studies presented during a poster discussion session at the symposium.
Breast cancer treatment and cardiovascular effects: The role of weight
In one analysis, Dr. Greenlee and colleagues examined outcomes in 13,582 breast cancer survivors with a median age of 60 years and median follow-up of 7 years to assess whether cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk associated with specific breast cancer therapies varies by body mass index (BMI) category at diagnosis.
Many routinely used breast cancer therapies are cardiotoxic, and being overweight or obese are known risk factors for CVD, but few studies have assessed whether BMI modifies the effect of these treatment on cardiovascular risk, Dr. Greenlee explained.
After adjusting for baseline demographic and health-related factors, and other breast cancer treatment, they found that:
- Ischemic heart disease risk was higher among normal-weight women who received anthracyclines, compared with those who did not (hazard ratio, 4.2). No other risk associations were observed for other breast cancer therapies and BMI groups.
- Heart failure/cardiomyopathy risk was higher among women with normal weight who received anthracyclines, cyclophosphamides, or left-sided radiation, compared with those who did not (HRs, 5.24, 3.27, and 2.05, respectively), and among overweight women who received anthracyclines, compared with those who did not (HR, 2.18). No risk associations were observed for women who received trastuzumab, taxanes, endocrine therapy, or radiation on any side, and no risk associations were observed for women who were obese.
- Stroke risk was higher in normal-weight women who received taxanes, cyclophosphamides, or left-sided radiation versus those who did not (HRs, 2.14, 2.35, and 1.31, respectively), and stroke risk was lower in obese women who received anthracyclines, taxanes, or cyclophosphamide, compared with those who did not (HRs, 0.32, 0.41, and 0.29, respectively). No risk associations were observed for trastuzumab, endocrine therapy, or radiation on any side, and no risk associations were observed for women who were overweight.
The lack of associations noted between treatments and heart failure risk among obese patients could be caused by the “obesity paradox” observed in prior obese populations, the investigators noted, adding that additional analyses are planned to “examine whether different dosage and duration of breast cancer therapy exposures across the BMI groups contributed to these risk associations.”
Breast cancer treatment and cardiometabolic effects: The role of menopausal status
In a separate analysis, Dr. Greenlee and colleagues looked at the association between endocrine therapies and cardiometabolic risk based on menopausal status.
Endocrine therapy is associated with CVD in breast cancer survivors and may be associated with developing cardiometabolic risk factors like diabetes, dyslipidemia, and hypertension, they noted, explaining that tamoxifen has mixed estrogenic and antiestrogenic activity, while aromatase inhibitors deplete endogenous estrogen.
Since most studies have compared tamoxifen with aromatase inhibitor use, it has been a challenge challenging to discern the effects of each, Dr. Greenlee said.
She and her colleagues reviewed records for 14,942 breast cancer survivors who were diagnosed between 2005 and 2013. The patients had a mean age of 61 years at baseline, and 24.9% were premenopausal at the time of diagnosis. Of the premenopausal women, 27.3% used tamoxifen, 19.2% used aromatase inhibitors, and 53.5% did not use endocrine therapy, and of the postmenopausal women, 6.6% used tamoxifen, 47.7% used aromatase inhibitors, and 45.7% did not use endocrine therapy.
After adjusting for baseline demographics and health factors, the investigators found that:
- The use of tamoxifen or aromatase inhibitors was not associated with a risk of developing diabetes, dyslipidemia, or hypertension in premenopausal women, or with a risk of developing diabetes or hypertension in postmenopausal women.
- The risk of dyslipidemia was higher in postmenopausal aromatase inhibitor users, and lower in postmenopausal tamoxifen users, compared with postmenopausal non-users of endocrine therapy (HRs, 1.15 and 0.75, respectively).
The lack of associations between endocrine therapy and CVD risk in premenopausal women may be from low power, Dr. Greenlee said, noting that analyses in larger sample sizes are needed.
She and her colleagues plan to conduct further analyses looking at treatment dosage and duration, and comparing steroidal versus nonsteroidal aromatase inhibitors.
Future studies should examine the implications of these associations on long-term CVD and how best to manage lipid profiles in postmenopausal breast cancer survivors who have a history of endocrine therapy treatment, they concluded.
This research was funded by grants from the National Cancer Institute.
For example, certain chemotherapy drugs may confer higher risk in breast cancer survivors of normal weight, whereas they may lower stroke risk in those who are obese, according to Heather Greenlee, ND, PhD, a public health researcher and naturopathic physician with the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle.
In postmenopausal women with breast cancer, aromatase inhibitors may increase cardiovascular risk, while tamoxifen appears to reduce the risk of incident dyslipidemia, she said.
The findings are from separate analyses of data from studies presented during a poster discussion session at the symposium.
Breast cancer treatment and cardiovascular effects: The role of weight
In one analysis, Dr. Greenlee and colleagues examined outcomes in 13,582 breast cancer survivors with a median age of 60 years and median follow-up of 7 years to assess whether cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk associated with specific breast cancer therapies varies by body mass index (BMI) category at diagnosis.
Many routinely used breast cancer therapies are cardiotoxic, and being overweight or obese are known risk factors for CVD, but few studies have assessed whether BMI modifies the effect of these treatment on cardiovascular risk, Dr. Greenlee explained.
After adjusting for baseline demographic and health-related factors, and other breast cancer treatment, they found that:
- Ischemic heart disease risk was higher among normal-weight women who received anthracyclines, compared with those who did not (hazard ratio, 4.2). No other risk associations were observed for other breast cancer therapies and BMI groups.
- Heart failure/cardiomyopathy risk was higher among women with normal weight who received anthracyclines, cyclophosphamides, or left-sided radiation, compared with those who did not (HRs, 5.24, 3.27, and 2.05, respectively), and among overweight women who received anthracyclines, compared with those who did not (HR, 2.18). No risk associations were observed for women who received trastuzumab, taxanes, endocrine therapy, or radiation on any side, and no risk associations were observed for women who were obese.
- Stroke risk was higher in normal-weight women who received taxanes, cyclophosphamides, or left-sided radiation versus those who did not (HRs, 2.14, 2.35, and 1.31, respectively), and stroke risk was lower in obese women who received anthracyclines, taxanes, or cyclophosphamide, compared with those who did not (HRs, 0.32, 0.41, and 0.29, respectively). No risk associations were observed for trastuzumab, endocrine therapy, or radiation on any side, and no risk associations were observed for women who were overweight.
The lack of associations noted between treatments and heart failure risk among obese patients could be caused by the “obesity paradox” observed in prior obese populations, the investigators noted, adding that additional analyses are planned to “examine whether different dosage and duration of breast cancer therapy exposures across the BMI groups contributed to these risk associations.”
Breast cancer treatment and cardiometabolic effects: The role of menopausal status
In a separate analysis, Dr. Greenlee and colleagues looked at the association between endocrine therapies and cardiometabolic risk based on menopausal status.
Endocrine therapy is associated with CVD in breast cancer survivors and may be associated with developing cardiometabolic risk factors like diabetes, dyslipidemia, and hypertension, they noted, explaining that tamoxifen has mixed estrogenic and antiestrogenic activity, while aromatase inhibitors deplete endogenous estrogen.
Since most studies have compared tamoxifen with aromatase inhibitor use, it has been a challenge challenging to discern the effects of each, Dr. Greenlee said.
She and her colleagues reviewed records for 14,942 breast cancer survivors who were diagnosed between 2005 and 2013. The patients had a mean age of 61 years at baseline, and 24.9% were premenopausal at the time of diagnosis. Of the premenopausal women, 27.3% used tamoxifen, 19.2% used aromatase inhibitors, and 53.5% did not use endocrine therapy, and of the postmenopausal women, 6.6% used tamoxifen, 47.7% used aromatase inhibitors, and 45.7% did not use endocrine therapy.
After adjusting for baseline demographics and health factors, the investigators found that:
- The use of tamoxifen or aromatase inhibitors was not associated with a risk of developing diabetes, dyslipidemia, or hypertension in premenopausal women, or with a risk of developing diabetes or hypertension in postmenopausal women.
- The risk of dyslipidemia was higher in postmenopausal aromatase inhibitor users, and lower in postmenopausal tamoxifen users, compared with postmenopausal non-users of endocrine therapy (HRs, 1.15 and 0.75, respectively).
The lack of associations between endocrine therapy and CVD risk in premenopausal women may be from low power, Dr. Greenlee said, noting that analyses in larger sample sizes are needed.
She and her colleagues plan to conduct further analyses looking at treatment dosage and duration, and comparing steroidal versus nonsteroidal aromatase inhibitors.
Future studies should examine the implications of these associations on long-term CVD and how best to manage lipid profiles in postmenopausal breast cancer survivors who have a history of endocrine therapy treatment, they concluded.
This research was funded by grants from the National Cancer Institute.
For example, certain chemotherapy drugs may confer higher risk in breast cancer survivors of normal weight, whereas they may lower stroke risk in those who are obese, according to Heather Greenlee, ND, PhD, a public health researcher and naturopathic physician with the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle.
In postmenopausal women with breast cancer, aromatase inhibitors may increase cardiovascular risk, while tamoxifen appears to reduce the risk of incident dyslipidemia, she said.
The findings are from separate analyses of data from studies presented during a poster discussion session at the symposium.
Breast cancer treatment and cardiovascular effects: The role of weight
In one analysis, Dr. Greenlee and colleagues examined outcomes in 13,582 breast cancer survivors with a median age of 60 years and median follow-up of 7 years to assess whether cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk associated with specific breast cancer therapies varies by body mass index (BMI) category at diagnosis.
Many routinely used breast cancer therapies are cardiotoxic, and being overweight or obese are known risk factors for CVD, but few studies have assessed whether BMI modifies the effect of these treatment on cardiovascular risk, Dr. Greenlee explained.
After adjusting for baseline demographic and health-related factors, and other breast cancer treatment, they found that:
- Ischemic heart disease risk was higher among normal-weight women who received anthracyclines, compared with those who did not (hazard ratio, 4.2). No other risk associations were observed for other breast cancer therapies and BMI groups.
- Heart failure/cardiomyopathy risk was higher among women with normal weight who received anthracyclines, cyclophosphamides, or left-sided radiation, compared with those who did not (HRs, 5.24, 3.27, and 2.05, respectively), and among overweight women who received anthracyclines, compared with those who did not (HR, 2.18). No risk associations were observed for women who received trastuzumab, taxanes, endocrine therapy, or radiation on any side, and no risk associations were observed for women who were obese.
- Stroke risk was higher in normal-weight women who received taxanes, cyclophosphamides, or left-sided radiation versus those who did not (HRs, 2.14, 2.35, and 1.31, respectively), and stroke risk was lower in obese women who received anthracyclines, taxanes, or cyclophosphamide, compared with those who did not (HRs, 0.32, 0.41, and 0.29, respectively). No risk associations were observed for trastuzumab, endocrine therapy, or radiation on any side, and no risk associations were observed for women who were overweight.
The lack of associations noted between treatments and heart failure risk among obese patients could be caused by the “obesity paradox” observed in prior obese populations, the investigators noted, adding that additional analyses are planned to “examine whether different dosage and duration of breast cancer therapy exposures across the BMI groups contributed to these risk associations.”
Breast cancer treatment and cardiometabolic effects: The role of menopausal status
In a separate analysis, Dr. Greenlee and colleagues looked at the association between endocrine therapies and cardiometabolic risk based on menopausal status.
Endocrine therapy is associated with CVD in breast cancer survivors and may be associated with developing cardiometabolic risk factors like diabetes, dyslipidemia, and hypertension, they noted, explaining that tamoxifen has mixed estrogenic and antiestrogenic activity, while aromatase inhibitors deplete endogenous estrogen.
Since most studies have compared tamoxifen with aromatase inhibitor use, it has been a challenge challenging to discern the effects of each, Dr. Greenlee said.
She and her colleagues reviewed records for 14,942 breast cancer survivors who were diagnosed between 2005 and 2013. The patients had a mean age of 61 years at baseline, and 24.9% were premenopausal at the time of diagnosis. Of the premenopausal women, 27.3% used tamoxifen, 19.2% used aromatase inhibitors, and 53.5% did not use endocrine therapy, and of the postmenopausal women, 6.6% used tamoxifen, 47.7% used aromatase inhibitors, and 45.7% did not use endocrine therapy.
After adjusting for baseline demographics and health factors, the investigators found that:
- The use of tamoxifen or aromatase inhibitors was not associated with a risk of developing diabetes, dyslipidemia, or hypertension in premenopausal women, or with a risk of developing diabetes or hypertension in postmenopausal women.
- The risk of dyslipidemia was higher in postmenopausal aromatase inhibitor users, and lower in postmenopausal tamoxifen users, compared with postmenopausal non-users of endocrine therapy (HRs, 1.15 and 0.75, respectively).
The lack of associations between endocrine therapy and CVD risk in premenopausal women may be from low power, Dr. Greenlee said, noting that analyses in larger sample sizes are needed.
She and her colleagues plan to conduct further analyses looking at treatment dosage and duration, and comparing steroidal versus nonsteroidal aromatase inhibitors.
Future studies should examine the implications of these associations on long-term CVD and how best to manage lipid profiles in postmenopausal breast cancer survivors who have a history of endocrine therapy treatment, they concluded.
This research was funded by grants from the National Cancer Institute.
FROM SABCS 2021
Cancer risk tied to some manufactured foods
SAN ANTONIO –
The findings were reported in three poster presentations (P1-09-01, P1-09-02 and P3-12-35) at the 2021 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium from the ongoing French NutriNet-Santé web-based study of 171,000 people that was launched in France in 2009 to investigate nutrition and health relationships. The authors of the analyses note that while evidence of deleterious health effects has been established for the dietary focus of their studies, and cancer risks have been suspected, strong evidence of a cancer association has been lacking.
Nitrates and nitrites are used in processed meats to increase shelf life and to avoid bacterial growth, said Eloi Chazelas, PhD, Nutritional Epidemiology Research Team (EREN) at Sorbonne Paris Nord University. Dr. Chazelas looked at consumption of nitrites and nitrates through repeated 24 hour dietary records, linked to a comprehensive food composition database. The study’s main outcome measure was adjusted associations between nitrite and nitrate exposures and the risk of cancer (overall and by main cancer sites).
During follow-up, 966 breast and 400 prostate cancers were diagnosed among 3,311 first incident cancer cases. Breast cancer risk was elevated (HR = 1.24 [1.03-1.48], P = 0.02) among higher consumers of nitrates from food additives, especially with potassium nitrate consumption (HR = 1.25 [1.04-1.50], P = 0.01). Elevated prostate cancer risk was associated with nitrites (HR = 1.58 [1.14-2.18], P = 0.008), specifically for sodium nitrite (HR = 1.62 [1.17-2.25], P = 0.004). Nitrates and nitrites from natural sources were not associated significantly with higher cancer risk, Dr. Chazelas said.
He and his team found that food additive nitrates were positively associated with breast cancer risk, and food additive nitrites were positively associated with prostate cancer risk. “While these results need confirmation in other large-scale prospective studies, they provide new insights in a context of lively debate around the ban of nitrite additives in the food industry,” said Dr. Chazelas, who is a doctoral candidate at Sorbonne Paris Nord University.
In “Breast and prostate cancer risk associated with nitrites and nitrates from food additives (P1-09-01),” the study included 102,046 adults from the French NutriNet-Santé prospective cohort (2009-2021). It examined associations between artificial sweetener intakes (total from all dietary sources, the most frequently consumed ones [aspartame e951, acesulfame-K e950 and sucralose e955]) and cancer risk (overall and by sites: breast, prostate and obesity-related cancers).
Overall cancer risk in people who consumed higher amounts of total sweeteners (i.e. above the median exposure in consumers) was elevated (n = 2,527 cases, hazard ratio = 1.12, 95 percent confidence interval = 1.00-1.25, P-trend=0.005), especially for aspartame (HR = 1.20 [1.05-1.38] P = 0.001) and acesulfame-K (HR = 1.18 [1.04-1.34] P = 0.003). Elevated breast cancer risks (among 723 cases) were observed for total sweeteners (HR = 1.25 [1.02-1.53] P = 0.01), for aspartame (HR = 1.33 [1.05-1.69] P = 0.007), and for acesulfame-K (HR = 1.39 [1.11-1.74] P = 0.003). Also, obesity-related cancers (1,509 cases) were increased for total sweeteners (HR = 1.16 [1.00-1.33] P = 0.02), for aspartame (HR = 1.22 [1.02-1.45] P = 0.01) and for acesulfame-K (HR = 1.23 [1.04-1.45] P = 0.01).
Artificial sweeteners are found in more than 10,000 foods and beverages, said Charlotte Debras, a doctoral candidate in nutritional epidemiology at Sorbonne Paris Nord University. “These findings provide important and novel insights for the ongoing re-evaluation of food additive sweeteners by the European Food Safety Authority and other health agencies globally,” she said.
Trans fatty acid intakes and cancer risk
Investigating associations between trans fatty acid intake (total ruminant [rTFAs], industrial [iTFAs], and corresponding specific isomers and cancer risk), the analysis of Gaëlle Wendeu-Foyet, PhD, Sorbonne Paris Nord University, found a total of 3,374 incident cancer cases (982 breast, 405 prostate) in an overall population of 104,909. Dietary intake of total TFAs was associated with higher prostate cancer risk (hazard ration for quartile 4 versus 1: 1.27, 1.11-1.77 P-trend = 0.005). Also, rTFAs were associated with increased overall cancer risk (1.16, 1.02-1.32 P-trend = 0.07), in particular the conjugated linoleic acid isomers (CLA) (1.19, 1.04-1.36 P-trend = 0.04). These associations were specifically observed for breast cancer (rTFAs: 1.35, 1.06-1.72 P-trend = 0.01; CLA: 1.29, 1.00-1.66 P-trend = 0.048), in particular before menopause (rTFAs: 1.68, 1.06-2.67 P-trend = 0.02; CLA: 2.013, 1.25-3.23 P-trend = 0.003). Several iTFAs were associated with overall (1.18, 1.06-1.31 P-trend = 0.02 for transdocosenoic acid), breast (isomer 18:2t: 1.30, 1.06-1.58 P-trend = 0.01; hexadecenoic acid: 1.28, 1.05-1.56 P-trend = 0.02) and prostate (transdocosenoic acid: 1.52, 1.09-2.12 P-trend = 0.07) cancer risks.
“These results support the WHO’s goal of achieving elimination from food supplies of industrially produced TFAs,” Dr. Foyet said. “The consumption of food products containing partially hydrogenated oils should be avoided.”
Nutrition, along with avoiding tobacco intake, is one of the main modifiable risk factors for chronic diseases. “There is a lot at stake in terms of prevention. This requires a combination of actions at the individual level to the public level by informing the public through food labeling,” Ms. Debras said.
It also requires influencing the context in which citizens evolve by encouraging manufacturers to improve their products (pricing policies, commitment charters for product reformulation, etc.), and limiting advertising and marketing for products of poor nutritional quality (especially among children),” she said.
SAN ANTONIO –
The findings were reported in three poster presentations (P1-09-01, P1-09-02 and P3-12-35) at the 2021 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium from the ongoing French NutriNet-Santé web-based study of 171,000 people that was launched in France in 2009 to investigate nutrition and health relationships. The authors of the analyses note that while evidence of deleterious health effects has been established for the dietary focus of their studies, and cancer risks have been suspected, strong evidence of a cancer association has been lacking.
Nitrates and nitrites are used in processed meats to increase shelf life and to avoid bacterial growth, said Eloi Chazelas, PhD, Nutritional Epidemiology Research Team (EREN) at Sorbonne Paris Nord University. Dr. Chazelas looked at consumption of nitrites and nitrates through repeated 24 hour dietary records, linked to a comprehensive food composition database. The study’s main outcome measure was adjusted associations between nitrite and nitrate exposures and the risk of cancer (overall and by main cancer sites).
During follow-up, 966 breast and 400 prostate cancers were diagnosed among 3,311 first incident cancer cases. Breast cancer risk was elevated (HR = 1.24 [1.03-1.48], P = 0.02) among higher consumers of nitrates from food additives, especially with potassium nitrate consumption (HR = 1.25 [1.04-1.50], P = 0.01). Elevated prostate cancer risk was associated with nitrites (HR = 1.58 [1.14-2.18], P = 0.008), specifically for sodium nitrite (HR = 1.62 [1.17-2.25], P = 0.004). Nitrates and nitrites from natural sources were not associated significantly with higher cancer risk, Dr. Chazelas said.
He and his team found that food additive nitrates were positively associated with breast cancer risk, and food additive nitrites were positively associated with prostate cancer risk. “While these results need confirmation in other large-scale prospective studies, they provide new insights in a context of lively debate around the ban of nitrite additives in the food industry,” said Dr. Chazelas, who is a doctoral candidate at Sorbonne Paris Nord University.
In “Breast and prostate cancer risk associated with nitrites and nitrates from food additives (P1-09-01),” the study included 102,046 adults from the French NutriNet-Santé prospective cohort (2009-2021). It examined associations between artificial sweetener intakes (total from all dietary sources, the most frequently consumed ones [aspartame e951, acesulfame-K e950 and sucralose e955]) and cancer risk (overall and by sites: breast, prostate and obesity-related cancers).
Overall cancer risk in people who consumed higher amounts of total sweeteners (i.e. above the median exposure in consumers) was elevated (n = 2,527 cases, hazard ratio = 1.12, 95 percent confidence interval = 1.00-1.25, P-trend=0.005), especially for aspartame (HR = 1.20 [1.05-1.38] P = 0.001) and acesulfame-K (HR = 1.18 [1.04-1.34] P = 0.003). Elevated breast cancer risks (among 723 cases) were observed for total sweeteners (HR = 1.25 [1.02-1.53] P = 0.01), for aspartame (HR = 1.33 [1.05-1.69] P = 0.007), and for acesulfame-K (HR = 1.39 [1.11-1.74] P = 0.003). Also, obesity-related cancers (1,509 cases) were increased for total sweeteners (HR = 1.16 [1.00-1.33] P = 0.02), for aspartame (HR = 1.22 [1.02-1.45] P = 0.01) and for acesulfame-K (HR = 1.23 [1.04-1.45] P = 0.01).
Artificial sweeteners are found in more than 10,000 foods and beverages, said Charlotte Debras, a doctoral candidate in nutritional epidemiology at Sorbonne Paris Nord University. “These findings provide important and novel insights for the ongoing re-evaluation of food additive sweeteners by the European Food Safety Authority and other health agencies globally,” she said.
Trans fatty acid intakes and cancer risk
Investigating associations between trans fatty acid intake (total ruminant [rTFAs], industrial [iTFAs], and corresponding specific isomers and cancer risk), the analysis of Gaëlle Wendeu-Foyet, PhD, Sorbonne Paris Nord University, found a total of 3,374 incident cancer cases (982 breast, 405 prostate) in an overall population of 104,909. Dietary intake of total TFAs was associated with higher prostate cancer risk (hazard ration for quartile 4 versus 1: 1.27, 1.11-1.77 P-trend = 0.005). Also, rTFAs were associated with increased overall cancer risk (1.16, 1.02-1.32 P-trend = 0.07), in particular the conjugated linoleic acid isomers (CLA) (1.19, 1.04-1.36 P-trend = 0.04). These associations were specifically observed for breast cancer (rTFAs: 1.35, 1.06-1.72 P-trend = 0.01; CLA: 1.29, 1.00-1.66 P-trend = 0.048), in particular before menopause (rTFAs: 1.68, 1.06-2.67 P-trend = 0.02; CLA: 2.013, 1.25-3.23 P-trend = 0.003). Several iTFAs were associated with overall (1.18, 1.06-1.31 P-trend = 0.02 for transdocosenoic acid), breast (isomer 18:2t: 1.30, 1.06-1.58 P-trend = 0.01; hexadecenoic acid: 1.28, 1.05-1.56 P-trend = 0.02) and prostate (transdocosenoic acid: 1.52, 1.09-2.12 P-trend = 0.07) cancer risks.
“These results support the WHO’s goal of achieving elimination from food supplies of industrially produced TFAs,” Dr. Foyet said. “The consumption of food products containing partially hydrogenated oils should be avoided.”
Nutrition, along with avoiding tobacco intake, is one of the main modifiable risk factors for chronic diseases. “There is a lot at stake in terms of prevention. This requires a combination of actions at the individual level to the public level by informing the public through food labeling,” Ms. Debras said.
It also requires influencing the context in which citizens evolve by encouraging manufacturers to improve their products (pricing policies, commitment charters for product reformulation, etc.), and limiting advertising and marketing for products of poor nutritional quality (especially among children),” she said.
SAN ANTONIO –
The findings were reported in three poster presentations (P1-09-01, P1-09-02 and P3-12-35) at the 2021 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium from the ongoing French NutriNet-Santé web-based study of 171,000 people that was launched in France in 2009 to investigate nutrition and health relationships. The authors of the analyses note that while evidence of deleterious health effects has been established for the dietary focus of their studies, and cancer risks have been suspected, strong evidence of a cancer association has been lacking.
Nitrates and nitrites are used in processed meats to increase shelf life and to avoid bacterial growth, said Eloi Chazelas, PhD, Nutritional Epidemiology Research Team (EREN) at Sorbonne Paris Nord University. Dr. Chazelas looked at consumption of nitrites and nitrates through repeated 24 hour dietary records, linked to a comprehensive food composition database. The study’s main outcome measure was adjusted associations between nitrite and nitrate exposures and the risk of cancer (overall and by main cancer sites).
During follow-up, 966 breast and 400 prostate cancers were diagnosed among 3,311 first incident cancer cases. Breast cancer risk was elevated (HR = 1.24 [1.03-1.48], P = 0.02) among higher consumers of nitrates from food additives, especially with potassium nitrate consumption (HR = 1.25 [1.04-1.50], P = 0.01). Elevated prostate cancer risk was associated with nitrites (HR = 1.58 [1.14-2.18], P = 0.008), specifically for sodium nitrite (HR = 1.62 [1.17-2.25], P = 0.004). Nitrates and nitrites from natural sources were not associated significantly with higher cancer risk, Dr. Chazelas said.
He and his team found that food additive nitrates were positively associated with breast cancer risk, and food additive nitrites were positively associated with prostate cancer risk. “While these results need confirmation in other large-scale prospective studies, they provide new insights in a context of lively debate around the ban of nitrite additives in the food industry,” said Dr. Chazelas, who is a doctoral candidate at Sorbonne Paris Nord University.
In “Breast and prostate cancer risk associated with nitrites and nitrates from food additives (P1-09-01),” the study included 102,046 adults from the French NutriNet-Santé prospective cohort (2009-2021). It examined associations between artificial sweetener intakes (total from all dietary sources, the most frequently consumed ones [aspartame e951, acesulfame-K e950 and sucralose e955]) and cancer risk (overall and by sites: breast, prostate and obesity-related cancers).
Overall cancer risk in people who consumed higher amounts of total sweeteners (i.e. above the median exposure in consumers) was elevated (n = 2,527 cases, hazard ratio = 1.12, 95 percent confidence interval = 1.00-1.25, P-trend=0.005), especially for aspartame (HR = 1.20 [1.05-1.38] P = 0.001) and acesulfame-K (HR = 1.18 [1.04-1.34] P = 0.003). Elevated breast cancer risks (among 723 cases) were observed for total sweeteners (HR = 1.25 [1.02-1.53] P = 0.01), for aspartame (HR = 1.33 [1.05-1.69] P = 0.007), and for acesulfame-K (HR = 1.39 [1.11-1.74] P = 0.003). Also, obesity-related cancers (1,509 cases) were increased for total sweeteners (HR = 1.16 [1.00-1.33] P = 0.02), for aspartame (HR = 1.22 [1.02-1.45] P = 0.01) and for acesulfame-K (HR = 1.23 [1.04-1.45] P = 0.01).
Artificial sweeteners are found in more than 10,000 foods and beverages, said Charlotte Debras, a doctoral candidate in nutritional epidemiology at Sorbonne Paris Nord University. “These findings provide important and novel insights for the ongoing re-evaluation of food additive sweeteners by the European Food Safety Authority and other health agencies globally,” she said.
Trans fatty acid intakes and cancer risk
Investigating associations between trans fatty acid intake (total ruminant [rTFAs], industrial [iTFAs], and corresponding specific isomers and cancer risk), the analysis of Gaëlle Wendeu-Foyet, PhD, Sorbonne Paris Nord University, found a total of 3,374 incident cancer cases (982 breast, 405 prostate) in an overall population of 104,909. Dietary intake of total TFAs was associated with higher prostate cancer risk (hazard ration for quartile 4 versus 1: 1.27, 1.11-1.77 P-trend = 0.005). Also, rTFAs were associated with increased overall cancer risk (1.16, 1.02-1.32 P-trend = 0.07), in particular the conjugated linoleic acid isomers (CLA) (1.19, 1.04-1.36 P-trend = 0.04). These associations were specifically observed for breast cancer (rTFAs: 1.35, 1.06-1.72 P-trend = 0.01; CLA: 1.29, 1.00-1.66 P-trend = 0.048), in particular before menopause (rTFAs: 1.68, 1.06-2.67 P-trend = 0.02; CLA: 2.013, 1.25-3.23 P-trend = 0.003). Several iTFAs were associated with overall (1.18, 1.06-1.31 P-trend = 0.02 for transdocosenoic acid), breast (isomer 18:2t: 1.30, 1.06-1.58 P-trend = 0.01; hexadecenoic acid: 1.28, 1.05-1.56 P-trend = 0.02) and prostate (transdocosenoic acid: 1.52, 1.09-2.12 P-trend = 0.07) cancer risks.
“These results support the WHO’s goal of achieving elimination from food supplies of industrially produced TFAs,” Dr. Foyet said. “The consumption of food products containing partially hydrogenated oils should be avoided.”
Nutrition, along with avoiding tobacco intake, is one of the main modifiable risk factors for chronic diseases. “There is a lot at stake in terms of prevention. This requires a combination of actions at the individual level to the public level by informing the public through food labeling,” Ms. Debras said.
It also requires influencing the context in which citizens evolve by encouraging manufacturers to improve their products (pricing policies, commitment charters for product reformulation, etc.), and limiting advertising and marketing for products of poor nutritional quality (especially among children),” she said.
FROM SABCS 2021
Breast cancer-related musculoskeletal pain alleviated with acupuncture
SAN ANTONIO –
Both techniques led to clinically meaningful and persistent reduction of pain, but electroacupuncture was more effective in reducing pain severity, according to study author Wanqing Iris Zhi, MD, PhD, of the Breast Medicine Service at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York.
Among breast cancer survivors, Dr. Zhi said, chronic musculoskeletal pain is common and debilitating. In earlier results of the PEACE (Personalized Electroacupuncture versus Auricular Acupuncture Comparative Effectiveness) trial, both electroacupuncture and auricular acupuncture improved pain control better than usual care in cancer survivors. The comparative effectiveness between electroacupuncture and auricular acupuncture among breast cancer survivors, specifically for chronic musculoskeletal pain, remains unknown.
To evaluate potential differences between electroacupuncture and auricular acupuncture, Dr. Zhi et al. examined data from PEACE, a three-arm, parallel, single center randomized trial investigating electroacupuncture and auricular acupuncture for chronic musculoskeletal pain, compared with usual care. Among 360 cancer survivors in PEACE, mean age in 165 cancer survivors with a primary diagnosis of breast cancer was 60.3 years (35.8 percent non-White) with a mean of 5.4 years since their cancer diagnoses. Patients in both the electroacupuncture and auricular acupuncture groups received 10 weekly treatments. Change in mean Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) pain severity from baseline to week 12 was the primary endpoint, with BPI change to week 24 as a secondary endpoint. Usual care patients, after week 12, could receive 10 electroacupuncture treatments.
The most common locations of chronic musculoskeletal pain, Dr. Zhi observed, were lower back (24 percent), knee/leg (24 percent) and shoulder/elbow (14 percent). About 70 percent of patients were taking pain medication. Both electroacupuncture and auricular acupuncture were associated with clinically meaningful and persistent pain reductions among the evaluated breast cancer survivors. The change in BPI severity from baseline to week 12 was –0.29 (confidence interval, –0.08, 0.28) in the UC group. In the electroacupuncture group it was –2.65 (CI, –3.06, –2.25; P ≤0.001 from baseline) and –2.37 versus usual care (CI, –3.05, –1.68; P ≤0.001 versus UC). For the auricular acupuncture group, the change from baseline was –1.75 (CI, –2.15, –1.35; P ≤0.001 from baseline) and –1.46 versus usual care (CI, –2.14, –0.78; P ≤0.001 versus UC). The difference in BPI pain severity reduction from baseline between electroacupuncture and auricular acupuncture of –0.90 (CI, –1.45, –0.36) was statistically significant (P ≤0.001). Electroacupuncture also reduced pain severity significantly more than auricular acupuncture at week 24 (CI, –0.82, [–1.38, –0.27], P = 0.004).
Dr. Zhi concluded that among breast cancer survivors, although both electroacupuncture and auricular acupuncture were associated with clinically meaningful and persistent pain reduction, electroacupuncture was more effective at reducing pain severity.
She pointed out also that neither surgery type (mastectomy versus lumpectomy; P = 0.83) nor aromatase inhibitor versus tamoxifen versus neither (P = 0.59) was associated with BPI/severity response among electroacupuncture and auricular acupuncture patients.
“Both electroacupuncture and auricular acupuncture are significantly better than usual care, so it suggests that both acupuncture methods can be utilized for treating chronic muscle skeletal pain in breast cancer survivors, but electroacupuncture is preferred,” Dr. Zhi said.
“Auricular acupuncture can be more painful,” said PEACE principal investigator Jun Mao, MD, who is chair of integrative medicine at Memorial Sloan Kettering. “Ten percent of women could not tolerate the ear pain or discomfort. Electroacupuncture is generally well tolerated. People are more relaxed after treatment. If both are available, start with electroacupuncture,” he said.
SAN ANTONIO –
Both techniques led to clinically meaningful and persistent reduction of pain, but electroacupuncture was more effective in reducing pain severity, according to study author Wanqing Iris Zhi, MD, PhD, of the Breast Medicine Service at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York.
Among breast cancer survivors, Dr. Zhi said, chronic musculoskeletal pain is common and debilitating. In earlier results of the PEACE (Personalized Electroacupuncture versus Auricular Acupuncture Comparative Effectiveness) trial, both electroacupuncture and auricular acupuncture improved pain control better than usual care in cancer survivors. The comparative effectiveness between electroacupuncture and auricular acupuncture among breast cancer survivors, specifically for chronic musculoskeletal pain, remains unknown.
To evaluate potential differences between electroacupuncture and auricular acupuncture, Dr. Zhi et al. examined data from PEACE, a three-arm, parallel, single center randomized trial investigating electroacupuncture and auricular acupuncture for chronic musculoskeletal pain, compared with usual care. Among 360 cancer survivors in PEACE, mean age in 165 cancer survivors with a primary diagnosis of breast cancer was 60.3 years (35.8 percent non-White) with a mean of 5.4 years since their cancer diagnoses. Patients in both the electroacupuncture and auricular acupuncture groups received 10 weekly treatments. Change in mean Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) pain severity from baseline to week 12 was the primary endpoint, with BPI change to week 24 as a secondary endpoint. Usual care patients, after week 12, could receive 10 electroacupuncture treatments.
The most common locations of chronic musculoskeletal pain, Dr. Zhi observed, were lower back (24 percent), knee/leg (24 percent) and shoulder/elbow (14 percent). About 70 percent of patients were taking pain medication. Both electroacupuncture and auricular acupuncture were associated with clinically meaningful and persistent pain reductions among the evaluated breast cancer survivors. The change in BPI severity from baseline to week 12 was –0.29 (confidence interval, –0.08, 0.28) in the UC group. In the electroacupuncture group it was –2.65 (CI, –3.06, –2.25; P ≤0.001 from baseline) and –2.37 versus usual care (CI, –3.05, –1.68; P ≤0.001 versus UC). For the auricular acupuncture group, the change from baseline was –1.75 (CI, –2.15, –1.35; P ≤0.001 from baseline) and –1.46 versus usual care (CI, –2.14, –0.78; P ≤0.001 versus UC). The difference in BPI pain severity reduction from baseline between electroacupuncture and auricular acupuncture of –0.90 (CI, –1.45, –0.36) was statistically significant (P ≤0.001). Electroacupuncture also reduced pain severity significantly more than auricular acupuncture at week 24 (CI, –0.82, [–1.38, –0.27], P = 0.004).
Dr. Zhi concluded that among breast cancer survivors, although both electroacupuncture and auricular acupuncture were associated with clinically meaningful and persistent pain reduction, electroacupuncture was more effective at reducing pain severity.
She pointed out also that neither surgery type (mastectomy versus lumpectomy; P = 0.83) nor aromatase inhibitor versus tamoxifen versus neither (P = 0.59) was associated with BPI/severity response among electroacupuncture and auricular acupuncture patients.
“Both electroacupuncture and auricular acupuncture are significantly better than usual care, so it suggests that both acupuncture methods can be utilized for treating chronic muscle skeletal pain in breast cancer survivors, but electroacupuncture is preferred,” Dr. Zhi said.
“Auricular acupuncture can be more painful,” said PEACE principal investigator Jun Mao, MD, who is chair of integrative medicine at Memorial Sloan Kettering. “Ten percent of women could not tolerate the ear pain or discomfort. Electroacupuncture is generally well tolerated. People are more relaxed after treatment. If both are available, start with electroacupuncture,” he said.
SAN ANTONIO –
Both techniques led to clinically meaningful and persistent reduction of pain, but electroacupuncture was more effective in reducing pain severity, according to study author Wanqing Iris Zhi, MD, PhD, of the Breast Medicine Service at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York.
Among breast cancer survivors, Dr. Zhi said, chronic musculoskeletal pain is common and debilitating. In earlier results of the PEACE (Personalized Electroacupuncture versus Auricular Acupuncture Comparative Effectiveness) trial, both electroacupuncture and auricular acupuncture improved pain control better than usual care in cancer survivors. The comparative effectiveness between electroacupuncture and auricular acupuncture among breast cancer survivors, specifically for chronic musculoskeletal pain, remains unknown.
To evaluate potential differences between electroacupuncture and auricular acupuncture, Dr. Zhi et al. examined data from PEACE, a three-arm, parallel, single center randomized trial investigating electroacupuncture and auricular acupuncture for chronic musculoskeletal pain, compared with usual care. Among 360 cancer survivors in PEACE, mean age in 165 cancer survivors with a primary diagnosis of breast cancer was 60.3 years (35.8 percent non-White) with a mean of 5.4 years since their cancer diagnoses. Patients in both the electroacupuncture and auricular acupuncture groups received 10 weekly treatments. Change in mean Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) pain severity from baseline to week 12 was the primary endpoint, with BPI change to week 24 as a secondary endpoint. Usual care patients, after week 12, could receive 10 electroacupuncture treatments.
The most common locations of chronic musculoskeletal pain, Dr. Zhi observed, were lower back (24 percent), knee/leg (24 percent) and shoulder/elbow (14 percent). About 70 percent of patients were taking pain medication. Both electroacupuncture and auricular acupuncture were associated with clinically meaningful and persistent pain reductions among the evaluated breast cancer survivors. The change in BPI severity from baseline to week 12 was –0.29 (confidence interval, –0.08, 0.28) in the UC group. In the electroacupuncture group it was –2.65 (CI, –3.06, –2.25; P ≤0.001 from baseline) and –2.37 versus usual care (CI, –3.05, –1.68; P ≤0.001 versus UC). For the auricular acupuncture group, the change from baseline was –1.75 (CI, –2.15, –1.35; P ≤0.001 from baseline) and –1.46 versus usual care (CI, –2.14, –0.78; P ≤0.001 versus UC). The difference in BPI pain severity reduction from baseline between electroacupuncture and auricular acupuncture of –0.90 (CI, –1.45, –0.36) was statistically significant (P ≤0.001). Electroacupuncture also reduced pain severity significantly more than auricular acupuncture at week 24 (CI, –0.82, [–1.38, –0.27], P = 0.004).
Dr. Zhi concluded that among breast cancer survivors, although both electroacupuncture and auricular acupuncture were associated with clinically meaningful and persistent pain reduction, electroacupuncture was more effective at reducing pain severity.
She pointed out also that neither surgery type (mastectomy versus lumpectomy; P = 0.83) nor aromatase inhibitor versus tamoxifen versus neither (P = 0.59) was associated with BPI/severity response among electroacupuncture and auricular acupuncture patients.
“Both electroacupuncture and auricular acupuncture are significantly better than usual care, so it suggests that both acupuncture methods can be utilized for treating chronic muscle skeletal pain in breast cancer survivors, but electroacupuncture is preferred,” Dr. Zhi said.
“Auricular acupuncture can be more painful,” said PEACE principal investigator Jun Mao, MD, who is chair of integrative medicine at Memorial Sloan Kettering. “Ten percent of women could not tolerate the ear pain or discomfort. Electroacupuncture is generally well tolerated. People are more relaxed after treatment. If both are available, start with electroacupuncture,” he said.
FROM SABCS 2021
Sacituzumab govitecan effective in Black mTNBC patients
A heterogenous disease with few treatment options and poor outcomes, mTNBC has an incidence rate twice as high in Black as in White women.
Black women with mTNBC may also experience worse outcomes than other groups, with a greater risk of mortality related to disparities in access to health care and in income, delays in treatment, a higher prevalence of comorbidities, and differences in tumor biology.
Previously presented data from the phase 3 ASCENT trial showed that SG nearly doubled overall survival versus single-agent chemotherapy in pretreated women with mTNBC, with the benefit observed across patient subgroups.
Based on these findings, the Food and Drug Administration approved SG for patients with mTNBC who have received at least two prior chemotherapies, at least one of which is to have been given in the metastatic setting.
Now, an analysis of the ASCENT data in just over 60 Black women with mTNBC showed that they can expect to see their progression-free survival (PFS) improve by 56% and their overall survival increase by a nonsignificant 36% when given SG as opposed to single-agent chemotherapy.
The research (abstract P5-16-07) was presented at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium on Dec. 10.
The team says that Black women with mTNBC “derived a similar clinical benefit” from SG versus chemotherapy to other women in the study, and had a “manageable” safety profile, which was “consistent with the full trial population.”
Consequently, SG “should be considered a treatment option for Black patients with mTNBC who have received ≥ 2 prior chemotherapies,” at least one of which having been given in the metastatic setting.
Lead researcher Lisa A. Carey, MD, told this news organiztion that it is “very important” to show that the drug works in Black patients, adding: “We know that certain drugs don’t perform so well and it’s also true that people of color are particularly affected by TNBC.”
She said there were “only 62” Black patients in ASCENT, “so if you look at the entire trial and make assumptions that the drug performs the same in all the subsets, then sometimes you’re wrong.”
Dr. Carey, the Richardson and Marilyn Jacobs Preyer Distinguished Professor in Breast Cancer Research, UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, Chapel Hill, N.C., said there is “emerging interest” in racial disparities in cancer outcomes.
“Black patients have more trouble with access to care,” she said, noting that “in trial populations, [the outcomes] generally seem similar because the patients who go onto the trials tend to be those that can participate, but you never know until you look.”
Overall, Dr. Carey said the current results suggest that, “at least from the standpoint of the therapeutic implications of this drug – which is really a pretty remarkable drug in the overall study – it behaves very similarly in this group.”
Jennifer K. Litton, MD, vice president of clinical research at University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, said: “We have known that minority patients, especially Black patients, have a higher rate of triple negative breast cancer and aggressive biologies, and have had worse breast cancer outcomes in many published series.”
She told this news organization that, “additionally, they are often underrepresented in breast cancer clinical trials.”
Dr. Litton said “the very favorable outcomes” reported in “this important subset of patients who participated in the ASCENT trial” confirm the use of SG in patients with mTNBC.
To examine the clinical outcomes of Black patients in the ASCENT study, the team conduced a prespecified analysis of participants self-reporting Black race who had been randomized to SG or single-agent chemotherapy of physician’s choice, including those with and without brain metastases.
Of the 529 patients enrolled to ASCENT, 62 (12%) were Black, of whom 28 were assigned to SG and 34 to single agent chemotherapy. The two groups were generally well balanced, although six patients in the chemotherapy arm had known brain metastases at baseline versus none of those given SG.
After a median treatment duration of 5.3 months with SG and 1.6 months for single-agent chemotherapy, there was a significant improvement in PFS with SG, at 5.4 months versus 2.2 months for chemotherapy, and a hazard ratio of 0.44 (P = .008).
There was also a nonsignificant improvement in overall survival with SG at 13.8 months versus 8.5 months for chemotherapy, and a hazard ratio of 0.64 (P = .159).
The objective response rate was 32% with SG versus 6% in patients given chemotherapy, while the median duration of response was 9.2 months in the SG arm and not evaluable for chemotherapy.
The researchers note that these efficacy findings were “consistent” with those seen in the full ASCENT study population.
In terms of safety, the most common treatment-related adverse events were neutropenia, seen in 64% of SG and 61% of chemotherapy patients, diarrhea in 64% and 13%, respectively, and fatigue, in 52% and 39%, respectively.
The most common grade ≥3 events were neutropenia, in 48% and 42% of SG and chemotherapy patients, respectively, followed by anemia, in 12% and 6%, respectively, leukopenia in 8% and 16%, respectively, and febrile neutropenia in 8% and 3%, respectively.
No treatment-related deaths occurred in either treatment arm.
Dose reduction due to treatment-emergent adverse events was recorded in 28% of patients receiving SG and 35% of those assigned to single-agent chemotherapy, and discontinuations occurred in 0% and 3%, respectively.
The study was sponsored by Gilead Sciences. Dr. Carey reports research funding from Sanofi, Novartis, Genentech/Roche, and GSK; spouse serves on the board of Falcon Therapeutics.
A heterogenous disease with few treatment options and poor outcomes, mTNBC has an incidence rate twice as high in Black as in White women.
Black women with mTNBC may also experience worse outcomes than other groups, with a greater risk of mortality related to disparities in access to health care and in income, delays in treatment, a higher prevalence of comorbidities, and differences in tumor biology.
Previously presented data from the phase 3 ASCENT trial showed that SG nearly doubled overall survival versus single-agent chemotherapy in pretreated women with mTNBC, with the benefit observed across patient subgroups.
Based on these findings, the Food and Drug Administration approved SG for patients with mTNBC who have received at least two prior chemotherapies, at least one of which is to have been given in the metastatic setting.
Now, an analysis of the ASCENT data in just over 60 Black women with mTNBC showed that they can expect to see their progression-free survival (PFS) improve by 56% and their overall survival increase by a nonsignificant 36% when given SG as opposed to single-agent chemotherapy.
The research (abstract P5-16-07) was presented at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium on Dec. 10.
The team says that Black women with mTNBC “derived a similar clinical benefit” from SG versus chemotherapy to other women in the study, and had a “manageable” safety profile, which was “consistent with the full trial population.”
Consequently, SG “should be considered a treatment option for Black patients with mTNBC who have received ≥ 2 prior chemotherapies,” at least one of which having been given in the metastatic setting.
Lead researcher Lisa A. Carey, MD, told this news organiztion that it is “very important” to show that the drug works in Black patients, adding: “We know that certain drugs don’t perform so well and it’s also true that people of color are particularly affected by TNBC.”
She said there were “only 62” Black patients in ASCENT, “so if you look at the entire trial and make assumptions that the drug performs the same in all the subsets, then sometimes you’re wrong.”
Dr. Carey, the Richardson and Marilyn Jacobs Preyer Distinguished Professor in Breast Cancer Research, UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, Chapel Hill, N.C., said there is “emerging interest” in racial disparities in cancer outcomes.
“Black patients have more trouble with access to care,” she said, noting that “in trial populations, [the outcomes] generally seem similar because the patients who go onto the trials tend to be those that can participate, but you never know until you look.”
Overall, Dr. Carey said the current results suggest that, “at least from the standpoint of the therapeutic implications of this drug – which is really a pretty remarkable drug in the overall study – it behaves very similarly in this group.”
Jennifer K. Litton, MD, vice president of clinical research at University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, said: “We have known that minority patients, especially Black patients, have a higher rate of triple negative breast cancer and aggressive biologies, and have had worse breast cancer outcomes in many published series.”
She told this news organization that, “additionally, they are often underrepresented in breast cancer clinical trials.”
Dr. Litton said “the very favorable outcomes” reported in “this important subset of patients who participated in the ASCENT trial” confirm the use of SG in patients with mTNBC.
To examine the clinical outcomes of Black patients in the ASCENT study, the team conduced a prespecified analysis of participants self-reporting Black race who had been randomized to SG or single-agent chemotherapy of physician’s choice, including those with and without brain metastases.
Of the 529 patients enrolled to ASCENT, 62 (12%) were Black, of whom 28 were assigned to SG and 34 to single agent chemotherapy. The two groups were generally well balanced, although six patients in the chemotherapy arm had known brain metastases at baseline versus none of those given SG.
After a median treatment duration of 5.3 months with SG and 1.6 months for single-agent chemotherapy, there was a significant improvement in PFS with SG, at 5.4 months versus 2.2 months for chemotherapy, and a hazard ratio of 0.44 (P = .008).
There was also a nonsignificant improvement in overall survival with SG at 13.8 months versus 8.5 months for chemotherapy, and a hazard ratio of 0.64 (P = .159).
The objective response rate was 32% with SG versus 6% in patients given chemotherapy, while the median duration of response was 9.2 months in the SG arm and not evaluable for chemotherapy.
The researchers note that these efficacy findings were “consistent” with those seen in the full ASCENT study population.
In terms of safety, the most common treatment-related adverse events were neutropenia, seen in 64% of SG and 61% of chemotherapy patients, diarrhea in 64% and 13%, respectively, and fatigue, in 52% and 39%, respectively.
The most common grade ≥3 events were neutropenia, in 48% and 42% of SG and chemotherapy patients, respectively, followed by anemia, in 12% and 6%, respectively, leukopenia in 8% and 16%, respectively, and febrile neutropenia in 8% and 3%, respectively.
No treatment-related deaths occurred in either treatment arm.
Dose reduction due to treatment-emergent adverse events was recorded in 28% of patients receiving SG and 35% of those assigned to single-agent chemotherapy, and discontinuations occurred in 0% and 3%, respectively.
The study was sponsored by Gilead Sciences. Dr. Carey reports research funding from Sanofi, Novartis, Genentech/Roche, and GSK; spouse serves on the board of Falcon Therapeutics.
A heterogenous disease with few treatment options and poor outcomes, mTNBC has an incidence rate twice as high in Black as in White women.
Black women with mTNBC may also experience worse outcomes than other groups, with a greater risk of mortality related to disparities in access to health care and in income, delays in treatment, a higher prevalence of comorbidities, and differences in tumor biology.
Previously presented data from the phase 3 ASCENT trial showed that SG nearly doubled overall survival versus single-agent chemotherapy in pretreated women with mTNBC, with the benefit observed across patient subgroups.
Based on these findings, the Food and Drug Administration approved SG for patients with mTNBC who have received at least two prior chemotherapies, at least one of which is to have been given in the metastatic setting.
Now, an analysis of the ASCENT data in just over 60 Black women with mTNBC showed that they can expect to see their progression-free survival (PFS) improve by 56% and their overall survival increase by a nonsignificant 36% when given SG as opposed to single-agent chemotherapy.
The research (abstract P5-16-07) was presented at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium on Dec. 10.
The team says that Black women with mTNBC “derived a similar clinical benefit” from SG versus chemotherapy to other women in the study, and had a “manageable” safety profile, which was “consistent with the full trial population.”
Consequently, SG “should be considered a treatment option for Black patients with mTNBC who have received ≥ 2 prior chemotherapies,” at least one of which having been given in the metastatic setting.
Lead researcher Lisa A. Carey, MD, told this news organiztion that it is “very important” to show that the drug works in Black patients, adding: “We know that certain drugs don’t perform so well and it’s also true that people of color are particularly affected by TNBC.”
She said there were “only 62” Black patients in ASCENT, “so if you look at the entire trial and make assumptions that the drug performs the same in all the subsets, then sometimes you’re wrong.”
Dr. Carey, the Richardson and Marilyn Jacobs Preyer Distinguished Professor in Breast Cancer Research, UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, Chapel Hill, N.C., said there is “emerging interest” in racial disparities in cancer outcomes.
“Black patients have more trouble with access to care,” she said, noting that “in trial populations, [the outcomes] generally seem similar because the patients who go onto the trials tend to be those that can participate, but you never know until you look.”
Overall, Dr. Carey said the current results suggest that, “at least from the standpoint of the therapeutic implications of this drug – which is really a pretty remarkable drug in the overall study – it behaves very similarly in this group.”
Jennifer K. Litton, MD, vice president of clinical research at University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, said: “We have known that minority patients, especially Black patients, have a higher rate of triple negative breast cancer and aggressive biologies, and have had worse breast cancer outcomes in many published series.”
She told this news organization that, “additionally, they are often underrepresented in breast cancer clinical trials.”
Dr. Litton said “the very favorable outcomes” reported in “this important subset of patients who participated in the ASCENT trial” confirm the use of SG in patients with mTNBC.
To examine the clinical outcomes of Black patients in the ASCENT study, the team conduced a prespecified analysis of participants self-reporting Black race who had been randomized to SG or single-agent chemotherapy of physician’s choice, including those with and without brain metastases.
Of the 529 patients enrolled to ASCENT, 62 (12%) were Black, of whom 28 were assigned to SG and 34 to single agent chemotherapy. The two groups were generally well balanced, although six patients in the chemotherapy arm had known brain metastases at baseline versus none of those given SG.
After a median treatment duration of 5.3 months with SG and 1.6 months for single-agent chemotherapy, there was a significant improvement in PFS with SG, at 5.4 months versus 2.2 months for chemotherapy, and a hazard ratio of 0.44 (P = .008).
There was also a nonsignificant improvement in overall survival with SG at 13.8 months versus 8.5 months for chemotherapy, and a hazard ratio of 0.64 (P = .159).
The objective response rate was 32% with SG versus 6% in patients given chemotherapy, while the median duration of response was 9.2 months in the SG arm and not evaluable for chemotherapy.
The researchers note that these efficacy findings were “consistent” with those seen in the full ASCENT study population.
In terms of safety, the most common treatment-related adverse events were neutropenia, seen in 64% of SG and 61% of chemotherapy patients, diarrhea in 64% and 13%, respectively, and fatigue, in 52% and 39%, respectively.
The most common grade ≥3 events were neutropenia, in 48% and 42% of SG and chemotherapy patients, respectively, followed by anemia, in 12% and 6%, respectively, leukopenia in 8% and 16%, respectively, and febrile neutropenia in 8% and 3%, respectively.
No treatment-related deaths occurred in either treatment arm.
Dose reduction due to treatment-emergent adverse events was recorded in 28% of patients receiving SG and 35% of those assigned to single-agent chemotherapy, and discontinuations occurred in 0% and 3%, respectively.
The study was sponsored by Gilead Sciences. Dr. Carey reports research funding from Sanofi, Novartis, Genentech/Roche, and GSK; spouse serves on the board of Falcon Therapeutics.
FROM SABCS 2021
PD-L1 cutoff for pembrolizumab in mTNBC confirmed
recently presented at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.
Patients enrolled in KEYNOTE-355 – which is a phase 3, placebo-controlled trial of 847 patients – were stratified by CPS scores of at least 1 and at least 10, with the latter group in which adding pembrolizumab to chemotherapy was shown to significantly improve both overall survival and progression-free survival.
As it was unclear whether taking a more fine-grained approach would reveal specific CPS scores at which pembrolizumab would be beneficial, Javier Cortes, MD, PhD, International Breast Cancer Center, Barcelona, and colleagues divided the patients into four CPS levels: less than 1, 1-9, 10-19, and at least 20.
Patients with a CPS 10-19 and at least 20 given pembrolizumab alongside chemotherapy had an overall survival benefit of 29% and 28%, respectively, while the PFS improvement was 30% and 38%. In the CPS of less than 1 and 1-9 groups, there were no discernible benefits from adding the checkpoint inhibitor.
“Given the similar outcomes in the CPS 10-19 and the CPS ≥20 subgroups, a CPS of 10 or more is a reasonable cutoff to define the population of patients with metastatic TNBC that might have benefit from the addition of pembrolizumab to chemotherapy,” Dr. Cortes said. “In my opinion, these results provide further support for pembrolizumab in combination with chemotherapy as a good option, maybe a standard of care for some patients ... with local recurrent unresectable or metastatic TNBC whose tumors express PD-1 CPS ≥10.”
Invited discussant Hope S. Rugo, MD, said the study demonstrates that PD-L1 CPS of at least 10 is “clearly the optimal cutoff for differentiating benefit from pembrolizumab” and confirms the combination with chemotherapy as a “standard of care in this population”.
However, there are a number of outstanding questions in the metastatic setting, she said, including the test used to determine PD-L1 expression.
“Clearly the test that you order should be matched to the planned checkpoint inhibitor, and we look forward to additional data” on the relative overlap of the assays used in both the current study and in KEYNOTE-522.
However, IMpassion130 showed there is “incomplete overlap in terms of the two antibodies and tests that have been used to define PD-L1 positivity in breast cancer,” said Dr. Rugo, professor of medicine in hematology and oncology at the University of California, San Francisco.
“For excellent responders, can chemotherapy and eventually immunotherapy be discontinued, and when is it optimal? How long should we be continuing the combination and how long should we continue the checkpoint inhibitor alone?” she asked.
“Certainly in my own clinical practice,” Dr. Rugo explained, “in those excellent responders, it’s difficult to know when to stop the checkpoint inhibitor, but sometimes toxicity tells us the answer to that question. At some point, we need to stop therapy and understand what happens to those patients.”
She said that only 38% of patients in the current study benefited from pembrolizumab. “How can we amplify the immune response in those patients who do not have PD-L1–positive disease to further extend this benefit, and can we extend the efficacy to other subtypes? There are ongoing studies evaluating this question,” Dr. Rugo said.
Dr. Cortes said that KEYNOTE-355 showed the addition of pembrolizumab to chemotherapy led to clinically meaningful improvements in both PFS and overall survival versus chemotherapy alone in the first-line treatment of mTNBC.
However, that benefit was seen only in patients with a PD-L1 CPS of at least 10, while there was no statistically significant improvement in either PFS or overall survival in those with a CPS of at least 1.
He explained that 847 patients with previously untreated locally recurrent or metastatic TNBC, or those who had been treated at least 6 months prior to disease recurrence, were randomized 2:1 to pembrolizumab or placebo plus chemotherapy.
For the current analysis, they substratified patients by PD-L1 CPS into less than 1, which accounted for 24.9% of patients; 1-9, seen in 36.2%-38.4%; 10-19, accounting for 13.9%-14.1%; and at least 20, seen in 22.8%-24.7% of patients.
Dr. Cortes said the overall survival rate among patients with CPS of at least 10 was 70.5% for patients treated with pembrolizumab plus chemotherapy versus 81.6% for those assigned to placebo, at a significant hazard ratio of 0.73 (P = .0093).
Among patients with CPS of at least 1, the overall survival rate was 79.1% with pembrolizumab plus chemotherapy and 83.9% in those given placebo, at a nonsignificant hazard ratio of 0.86. This translated into an HR of 0.89 in the intention-to-treat analysis.
Turning to the novel subgroups, Dr. Cortes showed that the HR for overall survival for pembrolizumab versus placebo was nonsignificant in patients with CPS of at least 1, at 0.97, and in those with CPS 1-9, at 1.09.
However, the HRs were markedly improved in patients with CPD 10-19, at 0.71, and in those with CPS of at least 20, at 0.72, showing that the “relative benefit of adding pembrolizumab to chemotherapy was pretty much the same ... suggesting that CPS ≥10 could be a reasonable cutoff.”
In both of these groups, there was a sustained separation in the overall survival curves starting at around 10 months.
Turning to the PFS results, Dr Cortes said the event-free rate was 65.5% with the addition of pembrolizumab to chemotherapy in patients with PD-L1 CPS of at least 10, while those given placebo had a rate of 78.6%, at an HR of 0.66.
In patients with PD-L1 CPS of at least 1, the HR was 0.75, or 0.82 in the intention-to-treat analysis.
“As with overall survival,” he said, there was a “trend toward improved efficacy with PD-L1 enrichment with the addition of pembrolizumab to chemotherapy, although the PFS benefit in the pembro arm was slightly greater in the CPS ≥20 subgroup, compared to the CPS 10-19 subgroup.”
However, they highlighted that the difference was “small and the confidence intervals clearly overlapped.”
Why does PD-L1 expression play a role in response to pembrolizumab in mTNBC, but not in the early disease setting as seen in KEYNOTE-522?
“This is a question we have raised many, many times and have had many debates on,” Dr. Cortes said. “They are two completely different populations with the early breast cancer setting completely different to that in metastatic disease. Maybe the microenvironment plays a different role there, maybe we have to explore more in detail other biomarkers. I also think that different drugs were used in the neoadjuvant setting. We still have many unanswered questions.”
Dr. Rugo suggested that previous studies have given some clues to these questions with reductions in PD-L1 expression and tumor-infiltrating leukocytes observed between primary and metastatic disease.
The immune differences between primary and metastatic disease lead to immune escape, she said, adding: “This is clearly complicated by mutational complexity under the pressure of treatment.”
The study was funded by Merck Sharp and Dohme. Dr. Cortes and Dr. Rugo reported relationships with numerous pharmaceutical companies.
recently presented at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.
Patients enrolled in KEYNOTE-355 – which is a phase 3, placebo-controlled trial of 847 patients – were stratified by CPS scores of at least 1 and at least 10, with the latter group in which adding pembrolizumab to chemotherapy was shown to significantly improve both overall survival and progression-free survival.
As it was unclear whether taking a more fine-grained approach would reveal specific CPS scores at which pembrolizumab would be beneficial, Javier Cortes, MD, PhD, International Breast Cancer Center, Barcelona, and colleagues divided the patients into four CPS levels: less than 1, 1-9, 10-19, and at least 20.
Patients with a CPS 10-19 and at least 20 given pembrolizumab alongside chemotherapy had an overall survival benefit of 29% and 28%, respectively, while the PFS improvement was 30% and 38%. In the CPS of less than 1 and 1-9 groups, there were no discernible benefits from adding the checkpoint inhibitor.
“Given the similar outcomes in the CPS 10-19 and the CPS ≥20 subgroups, a CPS of 10 or more is a reasonable cutoff to define the population of patients with metastatic TNBC that might have benefit from the addition of pembrolizumab to chemotherapy,” Dr. Cortes said. “In my opinion, these results provide further support for pembrolizumab in combination with chemotherapy as a good option, maybe a standard of care for some patients ... with local recurrent unresectable or metastatic TNBC whose tumors express PD-1 CPS ≥10.”
Invited discussant Hope S. Rugo, MD, said the study demonstrates that PD-L1 CPS of at least 10 is “clearly the optimal cutoff for differentiating benefit from pembrolizumab” and confirms the combination with chemotherapy as a “standard of care in this population”.
However, there are a number of outstanding questions in the metastatic setting, she said, including the test used to determine PD-L1 expression.
“Clearly the test that you order should be matched to the planned checkpoint inhibitor, and we look forward to additional data” on the relative overlap of the assays used in both the current study and in KEYNOTE-522.
However, IMpassion130 showed there is “incomplete overlap in terms of the two antibodies and tests that have been used to define PD-L1 positivity in breast cancer,” said Dr. Rugo, professor of medicine in hematology and oncology at the University of California, San Francisco.
“For excellent responders, can chemotherapy and eventually immunotherapy be discontinued, and when is it optimal? How long should we be continuing the combination and how long should we continue the checkpoint inhibitor alone?” she asked.
“Certainly in my own clinical practice,” Dr. Rugo explained, “in those excellent responders, it’s difficult to know when to stop the checkpoint inhibitor, but sometimes toxicity tells us the answer to that question. At some point, we need to stop therapy and understand what happens to those patients.”
She said that only 38% of patients in the current study benefited from pembrolizumab. “How can we amplify the immune response in those patients who do not have PD-L1–positive disease to further extend this benefit, and can we extend the efficacy to other subtypes? There are ongoing studies evaluating this question,” Dr. Rugo said.
Dr. Cortes said that KEYNOTE-355 showed the addition of pembrolizumab to chemotherapy led to clinically meaningful improvements in both PFS and overall survival versus chemotherapy alone in the first-line treatment of mTNBC.
However, that benefit was seen only in patients with a PD-L1 CPS of at least 10, while there was no statistically significant improvement in either PFS or overall survival in those with a CPS of at least 1.
He explained that 847 patients with previously untreated locally recurrent or metastatic TNBC, or those who had been treated at least 6 months prior to disease recurrence, were randomized 2:1 to pembrolizumab or placebo plus chemotherapy.
For the current analysis, they substratified patients by PD-L1 CPS into less than 1, which accounted for 24.9% of patients; 1-9, seen in 36.2%-38.4%; 10-19, accounting for 13.9%-14.1%; and at least 20, seen in 22.8%-24.7% of patients.
Dr. Cortes said the overall survival rate among patients with CPS of at least 10 was 70.5% for patients treated with pembrolizumab plus chemotherapy versus 81.6% for those assigned to placebo, at a significant hazard ratio of 0.73 (P = .0093).
Among patients with CPS of at least 1, the overall survival rate was 79.1% with pembrolizumab plus chemotherapy and 83.9% in those given placebo, at a nonsignificant hazard ratio of 0.86. This translated into an HR of 0.89 in the intention-to-treat analysis.
Turning to the novel subgroups, Dr. Cortes showed that the HR for overall survival for pembrolizumab versus placebo was nonsignificant in patients with CPS of at least 1, at 0.97, and in those with CPS 1-9, at 1.09.
However, the HRs were markedly improved in patients with CPD 10-19, at 0.71, and in those with CPS of at least 20, at 0.72, showing that the “relative benefit of adding pembrolizumab to chemotherapy was pretty much the same ... suggesting that CPS ≥10 could be a reasonable cutoff.”
In both of these groups, there was a sustained separation in the overall survival curves starting at around 10 months.
Turning to the PFS results, Dr Cortes said the event-free rate was 65.5% with the addition of pembrolizumab to chemotherapy in patients with PD-L1 CPS of at least 10, while those given placebo had a rate of 78.6%, at an HR of 0.66.
In patients with PD-L1 CPS of at least 1, the HR was 0.75, or 0.82 in the intention-to-treat analysis.
“As with overall survival,” he said, there was a “trend toward improved efficacy with PD-L1 enrichment with the addition of pembrolizumab to chemotherapy, although the PFS benefit in the pembro arm was slightly greater in the CPS ≥20 subgroup, compared to the CPS 10-19 subgroup.”
However, they highlighted that the difference was “small and the confidence intervals clearly overlapped.”
Why does PD-L1 expression play a role in response to pembrolizumab in mTNBC, but not in the early disease setting as seen in KEYNOTE-522?
“This is a question we have raised many, many times and have had many debates on,” Dr. Cortes said. “They are two completely different populations with the early breast cancer setting completely different to that in metastatic disease. Maybe the microenvironment plays a different role there, maybe we have to explore more in detail other biomarkers. I also think that different drugs were used in the neoadjuvant setting. We still have many unanswered questions.”
Dr. Rugo suggested that previous studies have given some clues to these questions with reductions in PD-L1 expression and tumor-infiltrating leukocytes observed between primary and metastatic disease.
The immune differences between primary and metastatic disease lead to immune escape, she said, adding: “This is clearly complicated by mutational complexity under the pressure of treatment.”
The study was funded by Merck Sharp and Dohme. Dr. Cortes and Dr. Rugo reported relationships with numerous pharmaceutical companies.
recently presented at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.
Patients enrolled in KEYNOTE-355 – which is a phase 3, placebo-controlled trial of 847 patients – were stratified by CPS scores of at least 1 and at least 10, with the latter group in which adding pembrolizumab to chemotherapy was shown to significantly improve both overall survival and progression-free survival.
As it was unclear whether taking a more fine-grained approach would reveal specific CPS scores at which pembrolizumab would be beneficial, Javier Cortes, MD, PhD, International Breast Cancer Center, Barcelona, and colleagues divided the patients into four CPS levels: less than 1, 1-9, 10-19, and at least 20.
Patients with a CPS 10-19 and at least 20 given pembrolizumab alongside chemotherapy had an overall survival benefit of 29% and 28%, respectively, while the PFS improvement was 30% and 38%. In the CPS of less than 1 and 1-9 groups, there were no discernible benefits from adding the checkpoint inhibitor.
“Given the similar outcomes in the CPS 10-19 and the CPS ≥20 subgroups, a CPS of 10 or more is a reasonable cutoff to define the population of patients with metastatic TNBC that might have benefit from the addition of pembrolizumab to chemotherapy,” Dr. Cortes said. “In my opinion, these results provide further support for pembrolizumab in combination with chemotherapy as a good option, maybe a standard of care for some patients ... with local recurrent unresectable or metastatic TNBC whose tumors express PD-1 CPS ≥10.”
Invited discussant Hope S. Rugo, MD, said the study demonstrates that PD-L1 CPS of at least 10 is “clearly the optimal cutoff for differentiating benefit from pembrolizumab” and confirms the combination with chemotherapy as a “standard of care in this population”.
However, there are a number of outstanding questions in the metastatic setting, she said, including the test used to determine PD-L1 expression.
“Clearly the test that you order should be matched to the planned checkpoint inhibitor, and we look forward to additional data” on the relative overlap of the assays used in both the current study and in KEYNOTE-522.
However, IMpassion130 showed there is “incomplete overlap in terms of the two antibodies and tests that have been used to define PD-L1 positivity in breast cancer,” said Dr. Rugo, professor of medicine in hematology and oncology at the University of California, San Francisco.
“For excellent responders, can chemotherapy and eventually immunotherapy be discontinued, and when is it optimal? How long should we be continuing the combination and how long should we continue the checkpoint inhibitor alone?” she asked.
“Certainly in my own clinical practice,” Dr. Rugo explained, “in those excellent responders, it’s difficult to know when to stop the checkpoint inhibitor, but sometimes toxicity tells us the answer to that question. At some point, we need to stop therapy and understand what happens to those patients.”
She said that only 38% of patients in the current study benefited from pembrolizumab. “How can we amplify the immune response in those patients who do not have PD-L1–positive disease to further extend this benefit, and can we extend the efficacy to other subtypes? There are ongoing studies evaluating this question,” Dr. Rugo said.
Dr. Cortes said that KEYNOTE-355 showed the addition of pembrolizumab to chemotherapy led to clinically meaningful improvements in both PFS and overall survival versus chemotherapy alone in the first-line treatment of mTNBC.
However, that benefit was seen only in patients with a PD-L1 CPS of at least 10, while there was no statistically significant improvement in either PFS or overall survival in those with a CPS of at least 1.
He explained that 847 patients with previously untreated locally recurrent or metastatic TNBC, or those who had been treated at least 6 months prior to disease recurrence, were randomized 2:1 to pembrolizumab or placebo plus chemotherapy.
For the current analysis, they substratified patients by PD-L1 CPS into less than 1, which accounted for 24.9% of patients; 1-9, seen in 36.2%-38.4%; 10-19, accounting for 13.9%-14.1%; and at least 20, seen in 22.8%-24.7% of patients.
Dr. Cortes said the overall survival rate among patients with CPS of at least 10 was 70.5% for patients treated with pembrolizumab plus chemotherapy versus 81.6% for those assigned to placebo, at a significant hazard ratio of 0.73 (P = .0093).
Among patients with CPS of at least 1, the overall survival rate was 79.1% with pembrolizumab plus chemotherapy and 83.9% in those given placebo, at a nonsignificant hazard ratio of 0.86. This translated into an HR of 0.89 in the intention-to-treat analysis.
Turning to the novel subgroups, Dr. Cortes showed that the HR for overall survival for pembrolizumab versus placebo was nonsignificant in patients with CPS of at least 1, at 0.97, and in those with CPS 1-9, at 1.09.
However, the HRs were markedly improved in patients with CPD 10-19, at 0.71, and in those with CPS of at least 20, at 0.72, showing that the “relative benefit of adding pembrolizumab to chemotherapy was pretty much the same ... suggesting that CPS ≥10 could be a reasonable cutoff.”
In both of these groups, there was a sustained separation in the overall survival curves starting at around 10 months.
Turning to the PFS results, Dr Cortes said the event-free rate was 65.5% with the addition of pembrolizumab to chemotherapy in patients with PD-L1 CPS of at least 10, while those given placebo had a rate of 78.6%, at an HR of 0.66.
In patients with PD-L1 CPS of at least 1, the HR was 0.75, or 0.82 in the intention-to-treat analysis.
“As with overall survival,” he said, there was a “trend toward improved efficacy with PD-L1 enrichment with the addition of pembrolizumab to chemotherapy, although the PFS benefit in the pembro arm was slightly greater in the CPS ≥20 subgroup, compared to the CPS 10-19 subgroup.”
However, they highlighted that the difference was “small and the confidence intervals clearly overlapped.”
Why does PD-L1 expression play a role in response to pembrolizumab in mTNBC, but not in the early disease setting as seen in KEYNOTE-522?
“This is a question we have raised many, many times and have had many debates on,” Dr. Cortes said. “They are two completely different populations with the early breast cancer setting completely different to that in metastatic disease. Maybe the microenvironment plays a different role there, maybe we have to explore more in detail other biomarkers. I also think that different drugs were used in the neoadjuvant setting. We still have many unanswered questions.”
Dr. Rugo suggested that previous studies have given some clues to these questions with reductions in PD-L1 expression and tumor-infiltrating leukocytes observed between primary and metastatic disease.
The immune differences between primary and metastatic disease lead to immune escape, she said, adding: “This is clearly complicated by mutational complexity under the pressure of treatment.”
The study was funded by Merck Sharp and Dohme. Dr. Cortes and Dr. Rugo reported relationships with numerous pharmaceutical companies.
FROM SABCS 2021
Pembrolizumab improves event-free survival in early TNBC
The original trial data in more than 1,100 patients with early-stage TNBC indicated that adding pembrolizumab to chemotherapy prior to surgery and giving the drug for a year afterward improves event-free survival (EFS) over placebo by 37%.
Now, the researchers conducted a series of prespecified sensitivity and subgroup analyses, finding remarkably consistent EFS outcomes whether considering the addition of adjuvant chemotherapy, positive surgical margins, or disease characteristics such as nodal status and disease stage.
The analyses showed that the benefit with pembrolizumab over placebo was “robust,” said study presenter Peter Schmid, MD, PhD, Centre for Experimental Cancer Medicine, Barts Cancer Institute, Queen Mary University of London.
“These results further support pembrolizumab plus platinum-containing neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by adjuvant pembrolizumab after surgery as a new standard of care treatment regimen for patients with high-risk, early-stage TNBC,” he said.
The research was presented at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium on Dec. 7.
Hope S. Rugo, MD, who was invited to comment on the findings, noted that, while the sensitivity analyses showed the benefit with pembrolizumab was seen across the board, the numbers in each group of interest were “very small, making any impact unlikely.”
She continued that there also remain a number of unanswered questions, chief among them being: “Does everybody need a checkpoint inhibitor? Perhaps studies ... could help us understand which patients might do well with chemotherapy alone.”
Dr. Rugo, who is professor of medicine in the division of hematology and oncology at the Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center at the University of California, San Francisco, , added that “we need to understand the balance of risk and toxicity” asking whether there are patients whose risk of an immunotoxicity is “so high that we should not give them a checkpoint inhibitor.”
It is not clear what constitutes the optimal chemotherapy backbone. “Does everybody need carboplatin? Does everyone need a year of pembrolizumab, even with a pathologic complete response given the intriguing data from GeparNUEVO and previously the I-SPY trial?” she asked.
“Of course, we don’t know the answers to those questions,” she said, but it is nevertheless possible to draw a roadmap for the treatment of early TNBC, although the choice of adjuvant therapy following surgery is less clear.
Dr. Rugo conducted a Twitter poll to canvas opinion on what to give to patients following surgery, depending on whether or not they have a pathological complete response.
At 73%, most of almost 200 respondents said patients with a pathological complete response should continue pembrolizumab for 1 year, while 72% said that patients without a pathological complete response should receive combination therapy of pembrolizumab and either capecitabine or olaparib, depending on mutational status.
Dr. Schmid began his presentation by noting that KEYNOTE-522 was the first prospective, randomized, phase 3 trial of pembrolizumab in early TNBC in the neoadjuvant and adjuvant setting.
Previously presented results showed that adding neoadjuvant pembrolizumab to chemotherapy was associated with a clinically meaningful increase in pathological complete response, while continuing with adjuvant chemotherapy after surgery led to a clinically meaningful improvement in EFS.
Consequently, the Food and Drug Administration approved pembrolizumab in this setting for patients with high-risk early-stage TNBC.
He reminded the audience that the trial included 1,174 patients randomized 2:1 to pembrolizumab or placebo every 3 weeks alongside eight cycles of chemotherapy, followed by pembrolizumab over placebo alone for up to nine cycles after undergoing definitive surgery.
After a median follow-up of 39.1 months, 15.7% of patients treated with pembrolizumab experienced an event versus 23.9% of those in the placebo group, at a hazard ratio of 0.63 (P = .00031). At 36 months, the EFS rate was 84.5% with pembrolizumab and 76.8% in patients treated with placebo.
Dr. Schmid said that they then performed five prespecified sensitivity analyses, which revealed that the results were “consistent with the primary EFS in all five sensitivity analyses, showing the robustnesses of the event-free survival benefit in the pembrolizumab arm.”
The first analysis, he continued, is of “particular interest as it considered the impact of postsurgery new anticancer therapy. For example, the use of adjuvant capecitabine.”
Censoring 31 patients from the pembrolizumab arm who received the drug and 13 of those given placebo, the team found that the hazard ratio for EFS for pembrolizumab versus placebo was 0.64.
Removing “positive margin at last surgery” as part of the definition of EFS also did not change the results substantially, with the HR for EFS for pembrolizumab versus placebo at 0.65.
Subgroup analysis revealed “consistent EFS results,” Dr. Schmid said, irrespective of whether stratifying the patients by nodal status, overall disease stage, menopausal status, HER2 status, or lactate dehydrogenase levels.
While patients in both treatment arms who had nodal involvement had worse outcomes than those without, those in the pembrolizumab arm “still had improved outcomes, compared with placebo, suggesting that it provides benefit regardless of nodal status.”
“Similarly, the EFS benefit with pembrolizumab was irrespective of disease stage,” Dr. Schmid said. Although the EFS improvement was greater in patients with stage II rather than III disease, at a HR of 0.60 versus 0.68, it highlights “the importance of early intervention.”
He said that the “rate of adverse events with pembrolizumab was low, especially in the adjuvant setting.”
Following his presentation, Dr. Schmid was asked whether he would consider retrying immunotherapy in patients after progression on pembrolizumab.
He replied that this is currently a “data-free zone.”
However, he said: “If a patient responded immunotherapy initially, had a disease-free interval and then has recurrence, then I would consider, if the patient is PD-L1 [programmed death–ligand 1] positive, at that time to add immunotherapy. We can’t say whether those patients will derive the same benefit” as that seen in randomized controlled trials in later stage TNBC, he added, “but there is, in my opinion, little to lose, especially if we have already established the patient tolerates immunotherapy well in that setting.”
Dr. Schmid continued that he “personally found it reassuring” that, in the current study, even patients without a complete pathological response “still showed a substantially better event-free survival compared to patients without immunotherapy, so I personally would consider immunotherapy for those patients when they relapse but we can discuss what the optimal disease-free interval is.”
The study was funded by Merck Sharp and Dohme. Both Dr. Rugo and Dr. Schmid reported relationships numerous pharmaceutical companies.
.
The original trial data in more than 1,100 patients with early-stage TNBC indicated that adding pembrolizumab to chemotherapy prior to surgery and giving the drug for a year afterward improves event-free survival (EFS) over placebo by 37%.
Now, the researchers conducted a series of prespecified sensitivity and subgroup analyses, finding remarkably consistent EFS outcomes whether considering the addition of adjuvant chemotherapy, positive surgical margins, or disease characteristics such as nodal status and disease stage.
The analyses showed that the benefit with pembrolizumab over placebo was “robust,” said study presenter Peter Schmid, MD, PhD, Centre for Experimental Cancer Medicine, Barts Cancer Institute, Queen Mary University of London.
“These results further support pembrolizumab plus platinum-containing neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by adjuvant pembrolizumab after surgery as a new standard of care treatment regimen for patients with high-risk, early-stage TNBC,” he said.
The research was presented at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium on Dec. 7.
Hope S. Rugo, MD, who was invited to comment on the findings, noted that, while the sensitivity analyses showed the benefit with pembrolizumab was seen across the board, the numbers in each group of interest were “very small, making any impact unlikely.”
She continued that there also remain a number of unanswered questions, chief among them being: “Does everybody need a checkpoint inhibitor? Perhaps studies ... could help us understand which patients might do well with chemotherapy alone.”
Dr. Rugo, who is professor of medicine in the division of hematology and oncology at the Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center at the University of California, San Francisco, , added that “we need to understand the balance of risk and toxicity” asking whether there are patients whose risk of an immunotoxicity is “so high that we should not give them a checkpoint inhibitor.”
It is not clear what constitutes the optimal chemotherapy backbone. “Does everybody need carboplatin? Does everyone need a year of pembrolizumab, even with a pathologic complete response given the intriguing data from GeparNUEVO and previously the I-SPY trial?” she asked.
“Of course, we don’t know the answers to those questions,” she said, but it is nevertheless possible to draw a roadmap for the treatment of early TNBC, although the choice of adjuvant therapy following surgery is less clear.
Dr. Rugo conducted a Twitter poll to canvas opinion on what to give to patients following surgery, depending on whether or not they have a pathological complete response.
At 73%, most of almost 200 respondents said patients with a pathological complete response should continue pembrolizumab for 1 year, while 72% said that patients without a pathological complete response should receive combination therapy of pembrolizumab and either capecitabine or olaparib, depending on mutational status.
Dr. Schmid began his presentation by noting that KEYNOTE-522 was the first prospective, randomized, phase 3 trial of pembrolizumab in early TNBC in the neoadjuvant and adjuvant setting.
Previously presented results showed that adding neoadjuvant pembrolizumab to chemotherapy was associated with a clinically meaningful increase in pathological complete response, while continuing with adjuvant chemotherapy after surgery led to a clinically meaningful improvement in EFS.
Consequently, the Food and Drug Administration approved pembrolizumab in this setting for patients with high-risk early-stage TNBC.
He reminded the audience that the trial included 1,174 patients randomized 2:1 to pembrolizumab or placebo every 3 weeks alongside eight cycles of chemotherapy, followed by pembrolizumab over placebo alone for up to nine cycles after undergoing definitive surgery.
After a median follow-up of 39.1 months, 15.7% of patients treated with pembrolizumab experienced an event versus 23.9% of those in the placebo group, at a hazard ratio of 0.63 (P = .00031). At 36 months, the EFS rate was 84.5% with pembrolizumab and 76.8% in patients treated with placebo.
Dr. Schmid said that they then performed five prespecified sensitivity analyses, which revealed that the results were “consistent with the primary EFS in all five sensitivity analyses, showing the robustnesses of the event-free survival benefit in the pembrolizumab arm.”
The first analysis, he continued, is of “particular interest as it considered the impact of postsurgery new anticancer therapy. For example, the use of adjuvant capecitabine.”
Censoring 31 patients from the pembrolizumab arm who received the drug and 13 of those given placebo, the team found that the hazard ratio for EFS for pembrolizumab versus placebo was 0.64.
Removing “positive margin at last surgery” as part of the definition of EFS also did not change the results substantially, with the HR for EFS for pembrolizumab versus placebo at 0.65.
Subgroup analysis revealed “consistent EFS results,” Dr. Schmid said, irrespective of whether stratifying the patients by nodal status, overall disease stage, menopausal status, HER2 status, or lactate dehydrogenase levels.
While patients in both treatment arms who had nodal involvement had worse outcomes than those without, those in the pembrolizumab arm “still had improved outcomes, compared with placebo, suggesting that it provides benefit regardless of nodal status.”
“Similarly, the EFS benefit with pembrolizumab was irrespective of disease stage,” Dr. Schmid said. Although the EFS improvement was greater in patients with stage II rather than III disease, at a HR of 0.60 versus 0.68, it highlights “the importance of early intervention.”
He said that the “rate of adverse events with pembrolizumab was low, especially in the adjuvant setting.”
Following his presentation, Dr. Schmid was asked whether he would consider retrying immunotherapy in patients after progression on pembrolizumab.
He replied that this is currently a “data-free zone.”
However, he said: “If a patient responded immunotherapy initially, had a disease-free interval and then has recurrence, then I would consider, if the patient is PD-L1 [programmed death–ligand 1] positive, at that time to add immunotherapy. We can’t say whether those patients will derive the same benefit” as that seen in randomized controlled trials in later stage TNBC, he added, “but there is, in my opinion, little to lose, especially if we have already established the patient tolerates immunotherapy well in that setting.”
Dr. Schmid continued that he “personally found it reassuring” that, in the current study, even patients without a complete pathological response “still showed a substantially better event-free survival compared to patients without immunotherapy, so I personally would consider immunotherapy for those patients when they relapse but we can discuss what the optimal disease-free interval is.”
The study was funded by Merck Sharp and Dohme. Both Dr. Rugo and Dr. Schmid reported relationships numerous pharmaceutical companies.
.
The original trial data in more than 1,100 patients with early-stage TNBC indicated that adding pembrolizumab to chemotherapy prior to surgery and giving the drug for a year afterward improves event-free survival (EFS) over placebo by 37%.
Now, the researchers conducted a series of prespecified sensitivity and subgroup analyses, finding remarkably consistent EFS outcomes whether considering the addition of adjuvant chemotherapy, positive surgical margins, or disease characteristics such as nodal status and disease stage.
The analyses showed that the benefit with pembrolizumab over placebo was “robust,” said study presenter Peter Schmid, MD, PhD, Centre for Experimental Cancer Medicine, Barts Cancer Institute, Queen Mary University of London.
“These results further support pembrolizumab plus platinum-containing neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by adjuvant pembrolizumab after surgery as a new standard of care treatment regimen for patients with high-risk, early-stage TNBC,” he said.
The research was presented at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium on Dec. 7.
Hope S. Rugo, MD, who was invited to comment on the findings, noted that, while the sensitivity analyses showed the benefit with pembrolizumab was seen across the board, the numbers in each group of interest were “very small, making any impact unlikely.”
She continued that there also remain a number of unanswered questions, chief among them being: “Does everybody need a checkpoint inhibitor? Perhaps studies ... could help us understand which patients might do well with chemotherapy alone.”
Dr. Rugo, who is professor of medicine in the division of hematology and oncology at the Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center at the University of California, San Francisco, , added that “we need to understand the balance of risk and toxicity” asking whether there are patients whose risk of an immunotoxicity is “so high that we should not give them a checkpoint inhibitor.”
It is not clear what constitutes the optimal chemotherapy backbone. “Does everybody need carboplatin? Does everyone need a year of pembrolizumab, even with a pathologic complete response given the intriguing data from GeparNUEVO and previously the I-SPY trial?” she asked.
“Of course, we don’t know the answers to those questions,” she said, but it is nevertheless possible to draw a roadmap for the treatment of early TNBC, although the choice of adjuvant therapy following surgery is less clear.
Dr. Rugo conducted a Twitter poll to canvas opinion on what to give to patients following surgery, depending on whether or not they have a pathological complete response.
At 73%, most of almost 200 respondents said patients with a pathological complete response should continue pembrolizumab for 1 year, while 72% said that patients without a pathological complete response should receive combination therapy of pembrolizumab and either capecitabine or olaparib, depending on mutational status.
Dr. Schmid began his presentation by noting that KEYNOTE-522 was the first prospective, randomized, phase 3 trial of pembrolizumab in early TNBC in the neoadjuvant and adjuvant setting.
Previously presented results showed that adding neoadjuvant pembrolizumab to chemotherapy was associated with a clinically meaningful increase in pathological complete response, while continuing with adjuvant chemotherapy after surgery led to a clinically meaningful improvement in EFS.
Consequently, the Food and Drug Administration approved pembrolizumab in this setting for patients with high-risk early-stage TNBC.
He reminded the audience that the trial included 1,174 patients randomized 2:1 to pembrolizumab or placebo every 3 weeks alongside eight cycles of chemotherapy, followed by pembrolizumab over placebo alone for up to nine cycles after undergoing definitive surgery.
After a median follow-up of 39.1 months, 15.7% of patients treated with pembrolizumab experienced an event versus 23.9% of those in the placebo group, at a hazard ratio of 0.63 (P = .00031). At 36 months, the EFS rate was 84.5% with pembrolizumab and 76.8% in patients treated with placebo.
Dr. Schmid said that they then performed five prespecified sensitivity analyses, which revealed that the results were “consistent with the primary EFS in all five sensitivity analyses, showing the robustnesses of the event-free survival benefit in the pembrolizumab arm.”
The first analysis, he continued, is of “particular interest as it considered the impact of postsurgery new anticancer therapy. For example, the use of adjuvant capecitabine.”
Censoring 31 patients from the pembrolizumab arm who received the drug and 13 of those given placebo, the team found that the hazard ratio for EFS for pembrolizumab versus placebo was 0.64.
Removing “positive margin at last surgery” as part of the definition of EFS also did not change the results substantially, with the HR for EFS for pembrolizumab versus placebo at 0.65.
Subgroup analysis revealed “consistent EFS results,” Dr. Schmid said, irrespective of whether stratifying the patients by nodal status, overall disease stage, menopausal status, HER2 status, or lactate dehydrogenase levels.
While patients in both treatment arms who had nodal involvement had worse outcomes than those without, those in the pembrolizumab arm “still had improved outcomes, compared with placebo, suggesting that it provides benefit regardless of nodal status.”
“Similarly, the EFS benefit with pembrolizumab was irrespective of disease stage,” Dr. Schmid said. Although the EFS improvement was greater in patients with stage II rather than III disease, at a HR of 0.60 versus 0.68, it highlights “the importance of early intervention.”
He said that the “rate of adverse events with pembrolizumab was low, especially in the adjuvant setting.”
Following his presentation, Dr. Schmid was asked whether he would consider retrying immunotherapy in patients after progression on pembrolizumab.
He replied that this is currently a “data-free zone.”
However, he said: “If a patient responded immunotherapy initially, had a disease-free interval and then has recurrence, then I would consider, if the patient is PD-L1 [programmed death–ligand 1] positive, at that time to add immunotherapy. We can’t say whether those patients will derive the same benefit” as that seen in randomized controlled trials in later stage TNBC, he added, “but there is, in my opinion, little to lose, especially if we have already established the patient tolerates immunotherapy well in that setting.”
Dr. Schmid continued that he “personally found it reassuring” that, in the current study, even patients without a complete pathological response “still showed a substantially better event-free survival compared to patients without immunotherapy, so I personally would consider immunotherapy for those patients when they relapse but we can discuss what the optimal disease-free interval is.”
The study was funded by Merck Sharp and Dohme. Both Dr. Rugo and Dr. Schmid reported relationships numerous pharmaceutical companies.
.
FROM SABCS 2021
Antibiotic use associated with triple-negative breast cancer mortality
SAN ANTONIO –
The study was recently presented at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium by Julia D. Ransohoff, MD, of Stanford (Calif.) University.
Gut-associated lymphoid tissues are the largest component of the immune system. They influence both local and systemic immune responses, but the use of antimicrobials can decrease circulating and tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes that effect the immune repertoire and in turn, the survival of women with triple-negative breast cancer.
Dr. Ransohoff and colleagues hypothesized that increasing antimicrobial exposure in the presence of time-varying absolute lymphocyte counts may lead to higher overall and breast cancer–specific mortality. Their analysis is based on data from the population-based Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results registry and electronic medical records from Stanford University and Sutter Health. It included 772 women who were treated for triple-negative breast cancer between 2000 and 2014. The women were followed for an average of 104 months.
In an earlier analysis of this same group, Dr. Ransohoff found that higher minimum absolute lymphocyte counts were associated with lower overall mortality (hazard ratio, 0.23; 95% confidence interval, 0.16-0.35) and breast cancer mortality (HR, 0.19; 95% CI, 0.11-0.34) The association between higher peripheral lymphocyte counts and tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes was significant.
In the analysis of relationships between antibiotic use and mortality, 85% of women (n = 654) were prescribed antibiotics after having been diagnosed with triple-negative breast cancer. The death rate among patients who were prescribed antibiotics was 23% (153/654), compared with 20% (24/118) among the patients who were not treated with antibiotics (which accounts for 15% of the entire group).
For total antibiotic exposure, the HR for overall mortality was 1.06 (95% CI, 1.03-1.09; P < .001) and 1.07 for breast cancer–specific mortality (95% CI, 1.04-1.10; P < .001). For unique antibiotic exposure (not counting repeat prescriptions of the same antibiotic), the HR for overall mortality was 1.17 (95% CI, 1.12-1.22; P < .001) and 1.18 for breast cancer–specific mortality (95% CI, 1.12-1.24; P < .001).
“These were all statistically significant associations derived from a statistical model that takes into account baseline patient characteristics, so the reported hazard ratios, to the best of our ability, represent the risk of death associated with antibiotic use adjusted for other baseline covariates. We’ve attempted to account for differences at baseline that may indicate patients are sicker, and so the reported risk represents mortality related with antibiotic exposure,” Dr. Ransohoff said.
Elucidating the role of the microbiome in mediating absolute lymphocyte counts and immune response may inform interventions to reduce triple-negative mortality, she said.
SAN ANTONIO –
The study was recently presented at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium by Julia D. Ransohoff, MD, of Stanford (Calif.) University.
Gut-associated lymphoid tissues are the largest component of the immune system. They influence both local and systemic immune responses, but the use of antimicrobials can decrease circulating and tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes that effect the immune repertoire and in turn, the survival of women with triple-negative breast cancer.
Dr. Ransohoff and colleagues hypothesized that increasing antimicrobial exposure in the presence of time-varying absolute lymphocyte counts may lead to higher overall and breast cancer–specific mortality. Their analysis is based on data from the population-based Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results registry and electronic medical records from Stanford University and Sutter Health. It included 772 women who were treated for triple-negative breast cancer between 2000 and 2014. The women were followed for an average of 104 months.
In an earlier analysis of this same group, Dr. Ransohoff found that higher minimum absolute lymphocyte counts were associated with lower overall mortality (hazard ratio, 0.23; 95% confidence interval, 0.16-0.35) and breast cancer mortality (HR, 0.19; 95% CI, 0.11-0.34) The association between higher peripheral lymphocyte counts and tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes was significant.
In the analysis of relationships between antibiotic use and mortality, 85% of women (n = 654) were prescribed antibiotics after having been diagnosed with triple-negative breast cancer. The death rate among patients who were prescribed antibiotics was 23% (153/654), compared with 20% (24/118) among the patients who were not treated with antibiotics (which accounts for 15% of the entire group).
For total antibiotic exposure, the HR for overall mortality was 1.06 (95% CI, 1.03-1.09; P < .001) and 1.07 for breast cancer–specific mortality (95% CI, 1.04-1.10; P < .001). For unique antibiotic exposure (not counting repeat prescriptions of the same antibiotic), the HR for overall mortality was 1.17 (95% CI, 1.12-1.22; P < .001) and 1.18 for breast cancer–specific mortality (95% CI, 1.12-1.24; P < .001).
“These were all statistically significant associations derived from a statistical model that takes into account baseline patient characteristics, so the reported hazard ratios, to the best of our ability, represent the risk of death associated with antibiotic use adjusted for other baseline covariates. We’ve attempted to account for differences at baseline that may indicate patients are sicker, and so the reported risk represents mortality related with antibiotic exposure,” Dr. Ransohoff said.
Elucidating the role of the microbiome in mediating absolute lymphocyte counts and immune response may inform interventions to reduce triple-negative mortality, she said.
SAN ANTONIO –
The study was recently presented at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium by Julia D. Ransohoff, MD, of Stanford (Calif.) University.
Gut-associated lymphoid tissues are the largest component of the immune system. They influence both local and systemic immune responses, but the use of antimicrobials can decrease circulating and tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes that effect the immune repertoire and in turn, the survival of women with triple-negative breast cancer.
Dr. Ransohoff and colleagues hypothesized that increasing antimicrobial exposure in the presence of time-varying absolute lymphocyte counts may lead to higher overall and breast cancer–specific mortality. Their analysis is based on data from the population-based Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results registry and electronic medical records from Stanford University and Sutter Health. It included 772 women who were treated for triple-negative breast cancer between 2000 and 2014. The women were followed for an average of 104 months.
In an earlier analysis of this same group, Dr. Ransohoff found that higher minimum absolute lymphocyte counts were associated with lower overall mortality (hazard ratio, 0.23; 95% confidence interval, 0.16-0.35) and breast cancer mortality (HR, 0.19; 95% CI, 0.11-0.34) The association between higher peripheral lymphocyte counts and tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes was significant.
In the analysis of relationships between antibiotic use and mortality, 85% of women (n = 654) were prescribed antibiotics after having been diagnosed with triple-negative breast cancer. The death rate among patients who were prescribed antibiotics was 23% (153/654), compared with 20% (24/118) among the patients who were not treated with antibiotics (which accounts for 15% of the entire group).
For total antibiotic exposure, the HR for overall mortality was 1.06 (95% CI, 1.03-1.09; P < .001) and 1.07 for breast cancer–specific mortality (95% CI, 1.04-1.10; P < .001). For unique antibiotic exposure (not counting repeat prescriptions of the same antibiotic), the HR for overall mortality was 1.17 (95% CI, 1.12-1.22; P < .001) and 1.18 for breast cancer–specific mortality (95% CI, 1.12-1.24; P < .001).
“These were all statistically significant associations derived from a statistical model that takes into account baseline patient characteristics, so the reported hazard ratios, to the best of our ability, represent the risk of death associated with antibiotic use adjusted for other baseline covariates. We’ve attempted to account for differences at baseline that may indicate patients are sicker, and so the reported risk represents mortality related with antibiotic exposure,” Dr. Ransohoff said.
Elucidating the role of the microbiome in mediating absolute lymphocyte counts and immune response may inform interventions to reduce triple-negative mortality, she said.
AT SABCS 2021
Omega-3 supplements may impact breast cancer risk
The study was presented by Katherine Cook, PhD, during a poster session at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium. Dr. Cook is a researcher at Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, N.C.
Obesity increases risk of breast cancer, but it also alters the composition of the gut microbiome. Obesity is associated with a greater frequency of Firmicute bacteria phyla, compared with Bacteroidetes phyla, while abnormally low ratios are associated with inflammatory bowel disease.
In mice, the researchers previously showed that diet can lead to changes in the microbiome of both the gut and the breast. They conducted fecal transplants between mice who were fed normal or high-fat diets (HFD), and then used a chemical carcinogenesis model to investigate the impact on tumor outcomes. They observed changes in the microbiota populations in both the gut and the mammary glands when mice fed a normal diet received fecal transplants from HFD mice. On the other hand, when HFD mice received fecal transplants from mice with normal diets, the transplants countered the increase in serum lipopolysaccharide levels associated with HFD. In vitro models showed that microbiota from HFD mice also altered the epithelial permeability of breast tissue, and infection of breast cancer cells with HFD microbiota led to greater proliferation.
The researchers also examined breast cancer tissue from women who received omega-3 PUFA supplements or placebo before undergoing primary tumor resection, and found that there were differences in the proportional abundance of specific microbes between tumor and adjacent normal tissue, with the former having excess of Lachnospiraceae and Ruminococcus. The finding suggests that these bacteria may grow better in a tumor microenvironment, and could play a role in breast cancer cell signaling. The supplements altered the microbiota of both normal and breast cancer tissue.
In the study presented at SABCS, the researchers analyzed fecal samples from 34 obese and overweight postmenopausal women involved in a weight-loss trial, who received 3.25 g/day of omega-3 PUFA supplements or placebo combined with calorie restriction and exercise. They performed metagenomic sequencing from the fecal samples at baseline and 6 months to determine microbiome populations.
Women who experienced weight loss, with or without omega-3 PUFA supplementation, had a decline in the abundance of Firmicutes phyla – a group linked to inflammation risk – as a percentage of overall bacterial phyla. The researchers found a similar trend among women who received omega-3 PUFA, regardless of how much weight they lost. At the species level, those who received supplements had higher proportional abundance of Phocaeicola massiliensis and reduced proportions of Faecalibacterium prausnitzii, R. lactaris, Blautia obeum, and Dorea formicigenerans (P < .05).
Weight loss combined with supplementation also seemed to affect gut microbiota, with subjects who lost more than 10% of their body weight and received omega-3 PUFA supplements having elevated Bacteriodetes and reduced Firmicutes, compared with all other groups (P < .05).
At 6 months, the researchers grouped women by mean body fat composition, and found both positive and negative correlations among different bacterial species. Finally, the researchers looked at serum levels of the inflammatory cytokines interleukin-6, monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1), and tumor necrosis factor–alpha at 6 months. Women with elevated levels of at least two cytokines had higher levels of two species of mucin-degrading bacteria. Levels of MCP-1 alone also correlated with greater proportions of mucin-degrading bacteria (P < .05).
The authors concluded that increasing omega-3 PUFA uptake to about 2% of total daily calorie intake could push the gut microbiome in a direction that improves intestinal permeability parameters and reduces chronic inflammation. These changes could lead to a reduction in the risk for postmenopausal breast cancer.
The study was funded by the Breast Cancer Research Foundation.
The study was presented by Katherine Cook, PhD, during a poster session at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium. Dr. Cook is a researcher at Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, N.C.
Obesity increases risk of breast cancer, but it also alters the composition of the gut microbiome. Obesity is associated with a greater frequency of Firmicute bacteria phyla, compared with Bacteroidetes phyla, while abnormally low ratios are associated with inflammatory bowel disease.
In mice, the researchers previously showed that diet can lead to changes in the microbiome of both the gut and the breast. They conducted fecal transplants between mice who were fed normal or high-fat diets (HFD), and then used a chemical carcinogenesis model to investigate the impact on tumor outcomes. They observed changes in the microbiota populations in both the gut and the mammary glands when mice fed a normal diet received fecal transplants from HFD mice. On the other hand, when HFD mice received fecal transplants from mice with normal diets, the transplants countered the increase in serum lipopolysaccharide levels associated with HFD. In vitro models showed that microbiota from HFD mice also altered the epithelial permeability of breast tissue, and infection of breast cancer cells with HFD microbiota led to greater proliferation.
The researchers also examined breast cancer tissue from women who received omega-3 PUFA supplements or placebo before undergoing primary tumor resection, and found that there were differences in the proportional abundance of specific microbes between tumor and adjacent normal tissue, with the former having excess of Lachnospiraceae and Ruminococcus. The finding suggests that these bacteria may grow better in a tumor microenvironment, and could play a role in breast cancer cell signaling. The supplements altered the microbiota of both normal and breast cancer tissue.
In the study presented at SABCS, the researchers analyzed fecal samples from 34 obese and overweight postmenopausal women involved in a weight-loss trial, who received 3.25 g/day of omega-3 PUFA supplements or placebo combined with calorie restriction and exercise. They performed metagenomic sequencing from the fecal samples at baseline and 6 months to determine microbiome populations.
Women who experienced weight loss, with or without omega-3 PUFA supplementation, had a decline in the abundance of Firmicutes phyla – a group linked to inflammation risk – as a percentage of overall bacterial phyla. The researchers found a similar trend among women who received omega-3 PUFA, regardless of how much weight they lost. At the species level, those who received supplements had higher proportional abundance of Phocaeicola massiliensis and reduced proportions of Faecalibacterium prausnitzii, R. lactaris, Blautia obeum, and Dorea formicigenerans (P < .05).
Weight loss combined with supplementation also seemed to affect gut microbiota, with subjects who lost more than 10% of their body weight and received omega-3 PUFA supplements having elevated Bacteriodetes and reduced Firmicutes, compared with all other groups (P < .05).
At 6 months, the researchers grouped women by mean body fat composition, and found both positive and negative correlations among different bacterial species. Finally, the researchers looked at serum levels of the inflammatory cytokines interleukin-6, monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1), and tumor necrosis factor–alpha at 6 months. Women with elevated levels of at least two cytokines had higher levels of two species of mucin-degrading bacteria. Levels of MCP-1 alone also correlated with greater proportions of mucin-degrading bacteria (P < .05).
The authors concluded that increasing omega-3 PUFA uptake to about 2% of total daily calorie intake could push the gut microbiome in a direction that improves intestinal permeability parameters and reduces chronic inflammation. These changes could lead to a reduction in the risk for postmenopausal breast cancer.
The study was funded by the Breast Cancer Research Foundation.
The study was presented by Katherine Cook, PhD, during a poster session at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium. Dr. Cook is a researcher at Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, N.C.
Obesity increases risk of breast cancer, but it also alters the composition of the gut microbiome. Obesity is associated with a greater frequency of Firmicute bacteria phyla, compared with Bacteroidetes phyla, while abnormally low ratios are associated with inflammatory bowel disease.
In mice, the researchers previously showed that diet can lead to changes in the microbiome of both the gut and the breast. They conducted fecal transplants between mice who were fed normal or high-fat diets (HFD), and then used a chemical carcinogenesis model to investigate the impact on tumor outcomes. They observed changes in the microbiota populations in both the gut and the mammary glands when mice fed a normal diet received fecal transplants from HFD mice. On the other hand, when HFD mice received fecal transplants from mice with normal diets, the transplants countered the increase in serum lipopolysaccharide levels associated with HFD. In vitro models showed that microbiota from HFD mice also altered the epithelial permeability of breast tissue, and infection of breast cancer cells with HFD microbiota led to greater proliferation.
The researchers also examined breast cancer tissue from women who received omega-3 PUFA supplements or placebo before undergoing primary tumor resection, and found that there were differences in the proportional abundance of specific microbes between tumor and adjacent normal tissue, with the former having excess of Lachnospiraceae and Ruminococcus. The finding suggests that these bacteria may grow better in a tumor microenvironment, and could play a role in breast cancer cell signaling. The supplements altered the microbiota of both normal and breast cancer tissue.
In the study presented at SABCS, the researchers analyzed fecal samples from 34 obese and overweight postmenopausal women involved in a weight-loss trial, who received 3.25 g/day of omega-3 PUFA supplements or placebo combined with calorie restriction and exercise. They performed metagenomic sequencing from the fecal samples at baseline and 6 months to determine microbiome populations.
Women who experienced weight loss, with or without omega-3 PUFA supplementation, had a decline in the abundance of Firmicutes phyla – a group linked to inflammation risk – as a percentage of overall bacterial phyla. The researchers found a similar trend among women who received omega-3 PUFA, regardless of how much weight they lost. At the species level, those who received supplements had higher proportional abundance of Phocaeicola massiliensis and reduced proportions of Faecalibacterium prausnitzii, R. lactaris, Blautia obeum, and Dorea formicigenerans (P < .05).
Weight loss combined with supplementation also seemed to affect gut microbiota, with subjects who lost more than 10% of their body weight and received omega-3 PUFA supplements having elevated Bacteriodetes and reduced Firmicutes, compared with all other groups (P < .05).
At 6 months, the researchers grouped women by mean body fat composition, and found both positive and negative correlations among different bacterial species. Finally, the researchers looked at serum levels of the inflammatory cytokines interleukin-6, monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1), and tumor necrosis factor–alpha at 6 months. Women with elevated levels of at least two cytokines had higher levels of two species of mucin-degrading bacteria. Levels of MCP-1 alone also correlated with greater proportions of mucin-degrading bacteria (P < .05).
The authors concluded that increasing omega-3 PUFA uptake to about 2% of total daily calorie intake could push the gut microbiome in a direction that improves intestinal permeability parameters and reduces chronic inflammation. These changes could lead to a reduction in the risk for postmenopausal breast cancer.
The study was funded by the Breast Cancer Research Foundation.
FROM SABCS 2021
Women struggle with benzodiazepine addiction post chemotherapy treatment
SAN ANTONIO –
shows a new study.While benzodiazepines and nonbenzodiazepine sedative-hypnotics are effective for these indications, misuse and increased health care utilization can ensue from their prolonged use, said Jacob C. Cogan, MD, a fellow in oncology/hematology at the Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center, Columbia University, New York. Dr. Cogan recently presented the results of the study at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.
The study included patients with breast cancer who received adjuvant chemotherapy between 2008 and 2017. Prescriptions for sedatives were divided into three periods: 365 days prior to chemotherapy to the start of chemotherapy (period one); start of chemotherapy to 90 days after the end of chemotherapy (period two); and 90-365 days after chemotherapy (period three). Patients who filled at least one benzodiazepine prescription in period two and patients who filled at least two benzodiazepine in period three were classified as new persistent benzodiazepine users. The same definitions were then used for nonbenzodiazepine sedative-hypnotics.
Among 17,532 benzodiazepine-naive patients (mean age, 57 years) and 21,863 nonbenzodiazepine sedative-hypnotic drug–naive patients (mean age, 56 years) who received adjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer, lumpectomies were performed for a small majority (56.6% benzodiazepine naive, 55.1% nonbenzodiazepine sedative-hypnotics naive) versus mastectomy, and about half of patients received less than 4 months of chemotherapy (48.0% benzodiazepine naive, 48.6% nonbenzodiazepine sedative-hypnotics naive). Among benzodiazepine-naive patients, 4,447 (25.4%) filled at least one benzodiazepine prescription during chemotherapy, and 2,160 (9.9%) filled at least one nonbenzodiazepine sedative-hypnotic prescription during chemotherapy. The rate of new persistent benzodiazepine use after initial exposure during chemotherapy was 26.8% (n = 1,192). Similarly, 33.8% (n = 730) of nonbenzodiazepine sedative-hypnotics users became new persistent users. In addition, 115 patients became new persistent users of both types of sedative-hypnotics.
New persistent benzodiazepine use was associated with several characteristics: age 50-65 (odds ratio, 1.23; P = .01) and age greater than 65 (OR, 1.38, P = .005) relative to age less than 49; as well as Medicaid insurance, relative to commercial and Medicare insurance (OR, 1.68; P < .0001). Both new persistent benzodiazepine and nonbenzodiazepine sedative-hypnotics use was associated with chemotherapy duration of less than 4 months relative to 4 or more months of chemotherapy (OR, 1.17; P = .03 for benzodiazepines; OR, 1.58; P < .0001 for nonbenzodiazepine sedative-hypnotics).
It is not clear why shorter chemotherapy duration is associated with more new persistent use, Dr. Cogan said. “It may be that, paradoxically, a shorter duration of treatment could lead to more anxiety about recurrence. These patients may need closer monitoring of mental health symptoms and earlier referral for psychological services.”
Dr. Cogan said that providers should take steps to ensure that benzodiazepines and nonbenzodiazepine sedatives are used appropriately, which includes tapering dosages and, when appropriate, encouraging nonpharmacologic strategies.
There were no funding or other conflicts of interest associated with this study.
SAN ANTONIO –
shows a new study.While benzodiazepines and nonbenzodiazepine sedative-hypnotics are effective for these indications, misuse and increased health care utilization can ensue from their prolonged use, said Jacob C. Cogan, MD, a fellow in oncology/hematology at the Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center, Columbia University, New York. Dr. Cogan recently presented the results of the study at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.
The study included patients with breast cancer who received adjuvant chemotherapy between 2008 and 2017. Prescriptions for sedatives were divided into three periods: 365 days prior to chemotherapy to the start of chemotherapy (period one); start of chemotherapy to 90 days after the end of chemotherapy (period two); and 90-365 days after chemotherapy (period three). Patients who filled at least one benzodiazepine prescription in period two and patients who filled at least two benzodiazepine in period three were classified as new persistent benzodiazepine users. The same definitions were then used for nonbenzodiazepine sedative-hypnotics.
Among 17,532 benzodiazepine-naive patients (mean age, 57 years) and 21,863 nonbenzodiazepine sedative-hypnotic drug–naive patients (mean age, 56 years) who received adjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer, lumpectomies were performed for a small majority (56.6% benzodiazepine naive, 55.1% nonbenzodiazepine sedative-hypnotics naive) versus mastectomy, and about half of patients received less than 4 months of chemotherapy (48.0% benzodiazepine naive, 48.6% nonbenzodiazepine sedative-hypnotics naive). Among benzodiazepine-naive patients, 4,447 (25.4%) filled at least one benzodiazepine prescription during chemotherapy, and 2,160 (9.9%) filled at least one nonbenzodiazepine sedative-hypnotic prescription during chemotherapy. The rate of new persistent benzodiazepine use after initial exposure during chemotherapy was 26.8% (n = 1,192). Similarly, 33.8% (n = 730) of nonbenzodiazepine sedative-hypnotics users became new persistent users. In addition, 115 patients became new persistent users of both types of sedative-hypnotics.
New persistent benzodiazepine use was associated with several characteristics: age 50-65 (odds ratio, 1.23; P = .01) and age greater than 65 (OR, 1.38, P = .005) relative to age less than 49; as well as Medicaid insurance, relative to commercial and Medicare insurance (OR, 1.68; P < .0001). Both new persistent benzodiazepine and nonbenzodiazepine sedative-hypnotics use was associated with chemotherapy duration of less than 4 months relative to 4 or more months of chemotherapy (OR, 1.17; P = .03 for benzodiazepines; OR, 1.58; P < .0001 for nonbenzodiazepine sedative-hypnotics).
It is not clear why shorter chemotherapy duration is associated with more new persistent use, Dr. Cogan said. “It may be that, paradoxically, a shorter duration of treatment could lead to more anxiety about recurrence. These patients may need closer monitoring of mental health symptoms and earlier referral for psychological services.”
Dr. Cogan said that providers should take steps to ensure that benzodiazepines and nonbenzodiazepine sedatives are used appropriately, which includes tapering dosages and, when appropriate, encouraging nonpharmacologic strategies.
There were no funding or other conflicts of interest associated with this study.
SAN ANTONIO –
shows a new study.While benzodiazepines and nonbenzodiazepine sedative-hypnotics are effective for these indications, misuse and increased health care utilization can ensue from their prolonged use, said Jacob C. Cogan, MD, a fellow in oncology/hematology at the Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center, Columbia University, New York. Dr. Cogan recently presented the results of the study at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.
The study included patients with breast cancer who received adjuvant chemotherapy between 2008 and 2017. Prescriptions for sedatives were divided into three periods: 365 days prior to chemotherapy to the start of chemotherapy (period one); start of chemotherapy to 90 days after the end of chemotherapy (period two); and 90-365 days after chemotherapy (period three). Patients who filled at least one benzodiazepine prescription in period two and patients who filled at least two benzodiazepine in period three were classified as new persistent benzodiazepine users. The same definitions were then used for nonbenzodiazepine sedative-hypnotics.
Among 17,532 benzodiazepine-naive patients (mean age, 57 years) and 21,863 nonbenzodiazepine sedative-hypnotic drug–naive patients (mean age, 56 years) who received adjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer, lumpectomies were performed for a small majority (56.6% benzodiazepine naive, 55.1% nonbenzodiazepine sedative-hypnotics naive) versus mastectomy, and about half of patients received less than 4 months of chemotherapy (48.0% benzodiazepine naive, 48.6% nonbenzodiazepine sedative-hypnotics naive). Among benzodiazepine-naive patients, 4,447 (25.4%) filled at least one benzodiazepine prescription during chemotherapy, and 2,160 (9.9%) filled at least one nonbenzodiazepine sedative-hypnotic prescription during chemotherapy. The rate of new persistent benzodiazepine use after initial exposure during chemotherapy was 26.8% (n = 1,192). Similarly, 33.8% (n = 730) of nonbenzodiazepine sedative-hypnotics users became new persistent users. In addition, 115 patients became new persistent users of both types of sedative-hypnotics.
New persistent benzodiazepine use was associated with several characteristics: age 50-65 (odds ratio, 1.23; P = .01) and age greater than 65 (OR, 1.38, P = .005) relative to age less than 49; as well as Medicaid insurance, relative to commercial and Medicare insurance (OR, 1.68; P < .0001). Both new persistent benzodiazepine and nonbenzodiazepine sedative-hypnotics use was associated with chemotherapy duration of less than 4 months relative to 4 or more months of chemotherapy (OR, 1.17; P = .03 for benzodiazepines; OR, 1.58; P < .0001 for nonbenzodiazepine sedative-hypnotics).
It is not clear why shorter chemotherapy duration is associated with more new persistent use, Dr. Cogan said. “It may be that, paradoxically, a shorter duration of treatment could lead to more anxiety about recurrence. These patients may need closer monitoring of mental health symptoms and earlier referral for psychological services.”
Dr. Cogan said that providers should take steps to ensure that benzodiazepines and nonbenzodiazepine sedatives are used appropriately, which includes tapering dosages and, when appropriate, encouraging nonpharmacologic strategies.
There were no funding or other conflicts of interest associated with this study.
AT SABCS 2021
‘Surprising’ lack of benefit to adding palbociclib to endocrine therapy in early HR+/HER2– breast cancer
Two years of adjuvant palbociclib added to endocrine therapy failed to improve invasive disease-free survival or any other efficacy endpoint in patients with stage II-III HR-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer.
“These definitive findings from the PALLAS trial, already indicated by an interim analysis, are surprising given the established efficacy of palbociclib and other CDK4/6i [inhibitors] in advanced breast cancer,” according to lead author Michael Gnant, MD, professor in the department of surgery, Medical University of Vienna, and colleagues.
The results from the PALLAS trial were presented Dec. 7 at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium and simultaneously published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.
At a median follow-up of 31 months and at the final protocol-defined analysis, invasive disease-free survival events occurred in 253 (8.8%) of 2,884 patients who received the cyclin-dependent kinase 4/6 (CDK4/6) inhibitor plus endocrine therapy and in 263 (9.1%) of 2,877 patients who received endocrine therapy alone. At 4 years, invasive disease-free survival rates were similar in the palbociclib group (84.2%) and standard treatment group (84.5%).
Caught by surprise
Studies have shown that combining CDK4/6 inhibitors and endocrine therapy prolongs progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival in metastatic HR-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer, with good tolerability.
“CDK4/6 inhibitors have markedly changed outcomes in the metastatic setting and are now standard of care,” said Dr. Gnant, who presented the recent findings at SABCS. “It seem[ed] only logical to try to transfer these benefits to the curative setting of early breast cancer.”
But in 2020, palbociclib manufacturer Pfizer issued a press release noting that the PALLAS trial was unlikely to show a statistically significant improvement in the primary endpoint of invasive disease-free survival.
The results “caught many of us by surprise,” Kathy D. Miller, MD, codirector of the breast cancer program at the Melvin and Bren Simon Cancer Center at Indiana University, Indianapolis, wrote in response to this announcement.
The trial was based on strong science and incredibly positive results in the metastatic setting but did not meet its primary endpoint when incorporated into the adjuvant setting, Dr. Miller noted in a Medscape blog. “That is certainly not the result we had hoped for, and it’s not the result many of us were expecting.”
Dr. Miller emphasized that “more than anything else, this trial reminds us of the absolute necessity of putting our ideas to the test and doing appropriately powered, appropriately controlled, and well-conducted randomized trials.”
The PALLAS trial enrolled 5,796 patients from 406 centers in 21 countries worldwide over a 3-year period, with 5,761 included in the intention-to-treat population.
Participants were randomly assigned to receive 2 years of palbociclib (125 mg orally once daily, days 1-21 of a 28-day cycle) with adjuvant endocrine therapy or adjuvant endocrine therapy alone for at least 5 years.
Dr. Gnant and colleagues found that the primary endpoint – invasive disease-free survival – did not differ significantly different between the two treatment groups (hazard ratio, 0.96; P = .65). Secondary endpoints in the palbociclib versus no-palbociclib groups were also similar: 4-year survival rates for invasive breast cancer-free survival were 85.4% versus 86%, distant recurrence-free survival was 86.2% versus 87.8%, locoregional recurrence-free survival was 96.8% versus 95.4%, and overall survival was 93.8% versus 95.2%.
The main side effect of palbociclib was neutropenia, but there were no new safety signals, Dr. Gnant explained. He noted, however, that the rates of palbociclib discontinuation were monitored closely and were substantial. At 1 year, 30% of patients discontinued palbociclib and by 24 months, 45% had stopped.
Not the final word?
An interim analysis of the phase 3 monarchE trial did not align with the PALLAS trial.
The monarchE trial found that adding the CDK4/6 inhibitor abemaciclib (Verzenio) to endocrine therapy for 2 years significantly reduced the risk of early recurrence, compared with endocrine therapy alone in the same patient populations – those with early HR-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer. The researchers reported the combination was associated with a 25% relative risk reduction of invasive disease-free survival (HR, 0.75; P =.0096).
The research was presented at the ESMO Virtual Congress 2020 and simultaneously published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.
Dr. Miller speculated how about how these two drugs that look so similar in the metastatic setting have given such different results in the adjuvant setting. One potential reason is pure chance.
“Any study, no matter how many zeros in the P value, could be simply the play of chance,” she said in an interview. “And that is true for negative and positive studies.”
The fault could also lie in the study design. “Remember, these are agents that we think of as reversing endocrine resistance and extending the benefit of hormone therapy,” she pointed out. “And yet we looked at very early results. Perhaps the study design was just wrong for palbociclib.”
Yet another possibility: The relative potency of those two CDK4/6 inhibitors could differ. “In a metastatic setting, that did not seem to affect effectiveness, but it clearly affected the toxicity profile. Perhaps in the adjuvant setting, those differences really do drive differences in efficacy,” she said.
Dr. Gnant also speculated that differences in the treatment schedules for the two drugs, as abemaciclib is taken continuously without a break, could potentially explain the different efficacies in the early breast cancer setting.
He called for long-term follow up, saying it’s essential for comprehensively examining outcomes in HR-positive luminal breast cancers.
“Ongoing analyses in the Trans-PALLAS translational and clinical science program, with almost 6,000 tumor blocks and tens of thousands of blood samples, will improve understanding of CD4/6 inhibition as well as contemporary management of HR-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer,” Dr. Gnant said.
The trial was funded by Pfizer, who provided study drug and financial support. In addition, the academic organizations ABCSG and AFT supported the trial by providing human resources. Dr. Gnant reported employment at Sandoz; receiving honoraria from Amgen, Novartis, AstraZeneca, Lilly; and consulting or advisory roles at Daiichi Sankyo, Veracyte, Tolmar¸ LifeBrain, and Lilly.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Two years of adjuvant palbociclib added to endocrine therapy failed to improve invasive disease-free survival or any other efficacy endpoint in patients with stage II-III HR-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer.
“These definitive findings from the PALLAS trial, already indicated by an interim analysis, are surprising given the established efficacy of palbociclib and other CDK4/6i [inhibitors] in advanced breast cancer,” according to lead author Michael Gnant, MD, professor in the department of surgery, Medical University of Vienna, and colleagues.
The results from the PALLAS trial were presented Dec. 7 at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium and simultaneously published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.
At a median follow-up of 31 months and at the final protocol-defined analysis, invasive disease-free survival events occurred in 253 (8.8%) of 2,884 patients who received the cyclin-dependent kinase 4/6 (CDK4/6) inhibitor plus endocrine therapy and in 263 (9.1%) of 2,877 patients who received endocrine therapy alone. At 4 years, invasive disease-free survival rates were similar in the palbociclib group (84.2%) and standard treatment group (84.5%).
Caught by surprise
Studies have shown that combining CDK4/6 inhibitors and endocrine therapy prolongs progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival in metastatic HR-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer, with good tolerability.
“CDK4/6 inhibitors have markedly changed outcomes in the metastatic setting and are now standard of care,” said Dr. Gnant, who presented the recent findings at SABCS. “It seem[ed] only logical to try to transfer these benefits to the curative setting of early breast cancer.”
But in 2020, palbociclib manufacturer Pfizer issued a press release noting that the PALLAS trial was unlikely to show a statistically significant improvement in the primary endpoint of invasive disease-free survival.
The results “caught many of us by surprise,” Kathy D. Miller, MD, codirector of the breast cancer program at the Melvin and Bren Simon Cancer Center at Indiana University, Indianapolis, wrote in response to this announcement.
The trial was based on strong science and incredibly positive results in the metastatic setting but did not meet its primary endpoint when incorporated into the adjuvant setting, Dr. Miller noted in a Medscape blog. “That is certainly not the result we had hoped for, and it’s not the result many of us were expecting.”
Dr. Miller emphasized that “more than anything else, this trial reminds us of the absolute necessity of putting our ideas to the test and doing appropriately powered, appropriately controlled, and well-conducted randomized trials.”
The PALLAS trial enrolled 5,796 patients from 406 centers in 21 countries worldwide over a 3-year period, with 5,761 included in the intention-to-treat population.
Participants were randomly assigned to receive 2 years of palbociclib (125 mg orally once daily, days 1-21 of a 28-day cycle) with adjuvant endocrine therapy or adjuvant endocrine therapy alone for at least 5 years.
Dr. Gnant and colleagues found that the primary endpoint – invasive disease-free survival – did not differ significantly different between the two treatment groups (hazard ratio, 0.96; P = .65). Secondary endpoints in the palbociclib versus no-palbociclib groups were also similar: 4-year survival rates for invasive breast cancer-free survival were 85.4% versus 86%, distant recurrence-free survival was 86.2% versus 87.8%, locoregional recurrence-free survival was 96.8% versus 95.4%, and overall survival was 93.8% versus 95.2%.
The main side effect of palbociclib was neutropenia, but there were no new safety signals, Dr. Gnant explained. He noted, however, that the rates of palbociclib discontinuation were monitored closely and were substantial. At 1 year, 30% of patients discontinued palbociclib and by 24 months, 45% had stopped.
Not the final word?
An interim analysis of the phase 3 monarchE trial did not align with the PALLAS trial.
The monarchE trial found that adding the CDK4/6 inhibitor abemaciclib (Verzenio) to endocrine therapy for 2 years significantly reduced the risk of early recurrence, compared with endocrine therapy alone in the same patient populations – those with early HR-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer. The researchers reported the combination was associated with a 25% relative risk reduction of invasive disease-free survival (HR, 0.75; P =.0096).
The research was presented at the ESMO Virtual Congress 2020 and simultaneously published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.
Dr. Miller speculated how about how these two drugs that look so similar in the metastatic setting have given such different results in the adjuvant setting. One potential reason is pure chance.
“Any study, no matter how many zeros in the P value, could be simply the play of chance,” she said in an interview. “And that is true for negative and positive studies.”
The fault could also lie in the study design. “Remember, these are agents that we think of as reversing endocrine resistance and extending the benefit of hormone therapy,” she pointed out. “And yet we looked at very early results. Perhaps the study design was just wrong for palbociclib.”
Yet another possibility: The relative potency of those two CDK4/6 inhibitors could differ. “In a metastatic setting, that did not seem to affect effectiveness, but it clearly affected the toxicity profile. Perhaps in the adjuvant setting, those differences really do drive differences in efficacy,” she said.
Dr. Gnant also speculated that differences in the treatment schedules for the two drugs, as abemaciclib is taken continuously without a break, could potentially explain the different efficacies in the early breast cancer setting.
He called for long-term follow up, saying it’s essential for comprehensively examining outcomes in HR-positive luminal breast cancers.
“Ongoing analyses in the Trans-PALLAS translational and clinical science program, with almost 6,000 tumor blocks and tens of thousands of blood samples, will improve understanding of CD4/6 inhibition as well as contemporary management of HR-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer,” Dr. Gnant said.
The trial was funded by Pfizer, who provided study drug and financial support. In addition, the academic organizations ABCSG and AFT supported the trial by providing human resources. Dr. Gnant reported employment at Sandoz; receiving honoraria from Amgen, Novartis, AstraZeneca, Lilly; and consulting or advisory roles at Daiichi Sankyo, Veracyte, Tolmar¸ LifeBrain, and Lilly.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Two years of adjuvant palbociclib added to endocrine therapy failed to improve invasive disease-free survival or any other efficacy endpoint in patients with stage II-III HR-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer.
“These definitive findings from the PALLAS trial, already indicated by an interim analysis, are surprising given the established efficacy of palbociclib and other CDK4/6i [inhibitors] in advanced breast cancer,” according to lead author Michael Gnant, MD, professor in the department of surgery, Medical University of Vienna, and colleagues.
The results from the PALLAS trial were presented Dec. 7 at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium and simultaneously published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.
At a median follow-up of 31 months and at the final protocol-defined analysis, invasive disease-free survival events occurred in 253 (8.8%) of 2,884 patients who received the cyclin-dependent kinase 4/6 (CDK4/6) inhibitor plus endocrine therapy and in 263 (9.1%) of 2,877 patients who received endocrine therapy alone. At 4 years, invasive disease-free survival rates were similar in the palbociclib group (84.2%) and standard treatment group (84.5%).
Caught by surprise
Studies have shown that combining CDK4/6 inhibitors and endocrine therapy prolongs progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival in metastatic HR-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer, with good tolerability.
“CDK4/6 inhibitors have markedly changed outcomes in the metastatic setting and are now standard of care,” said Dr. Gnant, who presented the recent findings at SABCS. “It seem[ed] only logical to try to transfer these benefits to the curative setting of early breast cancer.”
But in 2020, palbociclib manufacturer Pfizer issued a press release noting that the PALLAS trial was unlikely to show a statistically significant improvement in the primary endpoint of invasive disease-free survival.
The results “caught many of us by surprise,” Kathy D. Miller, MD, codirector of the breast cancer program at the Melvin and Bren Simon Cancer Center at Indiana University, Indianapolis, wrote in response to this announcement.
The trial was based on strong science and incredibly positive results in the metastatic setting but did not meet its primary endpoint when incorporated into the adjuvant setting, Dr. Miller noted in a Medscape blog. “That is certainly not the result we had hoped for, and it’s not the result many of us were expecting.”
Dr. Miller emphasized that “more than anything else, this trial reminds us of the absolute necessity of putting our ideas to the test and doing appropriately powered, appropriately controlled, and well-conducted randomized trials.”
The PALLAS trial enrolled 5,796 patients from 406 centers in 21 countries worldwide over a 3-year period, with 5,761 included in the intention-to-treat population.
Participants were randomly assigned to receive 2 years of palbociclib (125 mg orally once daily, days 1-21 of a 28-day cycle) with adjuvant endocrine therapy or adjuvant endocrine therapy alone for at least 5 years.
Dr. Gnant and colleagues found that the primary endpoint – invasive disease-free survival – did not differ significantly different between the two treatment groups (hazard ratio, 0.96; P = .65). Secondary endpoints in the palbociclib versus no-palbociclib groups were also similar: 4-year survival rates for invasive breast cancer-free survival were 85.4% versus 86%, distant recurrence-free survival was 86.2% versus 87.8%, locoregional recurrence-free survival was 96.8% versus 95.4%, and overall survival was 93.8% versus 95.2%.
The main side effect of palbociclib was neutropenia, but there were no new safety signals, Dr. Gnant explained. He noted, however, that the rates of palbociclib discontinuation were monitored closely and were substantial. At 1 year, 30% of patients discontinued palbociclib and by 24 months, 45% had stopped.
Not the final word?
An interim analysis of the phase 3 monarchE trial did not align with the PALLAS trial.
The monarchE trial found that adding the CDK4/6 inhibitor abemaciclib (Verzenio) to endocrine therapy for 2 years significantly reduced the risk of early recurrence, compared with endocrine therapy alone in the same patient populations – those with early HR-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer. The researchers reported the combination was associated with a 25% relative risk reduction of invasive disease-free survival (HR, 0.75; P =.0096).
The research was presented at the ESMO Virtual Congress 2020 and simultaneously published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.
Dr. Miller speculated how about how these two drugs that look so similar in the metastatic setting have given such different results in the adjuvant setting. One potential reason is pure chance.
“Any study, no matter how many zeros in the P value, could be simply the play of chance,” she said in an interview. “And that is true for negative and positive studies.”
The fault could also lie in the study design. “Remember, these are agents that we think of as reversing endocrine resistance and extending the benefit of hormone therapy,” she pointed out. “And yet we looked at very early results. Perhaps the study design was just wrong for palbociclib.”
Yet another possibility: The relative potency of those two CDK4/6 inhibitors could differ. “In a metastatic setting, that did not seem to affect effectiveness, but it clearly affected the toxicity profile. Perhaps in the adjuvant setting, those differences really do drive differences in efficacy,” she said.
Dr. Gnant also speculated that differences in the treatment schedules for the two drugs, as abemaciclib is taken continuously without a break, could potentially explain the different efficacies in the early breast cancer setting.
He called for long-term follow up, saying it’s essential for comprehensively examining outcomes in HR-positive luminal breast cancers.
“Ongoing analyses in the Trans-PALLAS translational and clinical science program, with almost 6,000 tumor blocks and tens of thousands of blood samples, will improve understanding of CD4/6 inhibition as well as contemporary management of HR-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer,” Dr. Gnant said.
The trial was funded by Pfizer, who provided study drug and financial support. In addition, the academic organizations ABCSG and AFT supported the trial by providing human resources. Dr. Gnant reported employment at Sandoz; receiving honoraria from Amgen, Novartis, AstraZeneca, Lilly; and consulting or advisory roles at Daiichi Sankyo, Veracyte, Tolmar¸ LifeBrain, and Lilly.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM SABCS 2021