Abstract

The development of trastuzumab (Herceptin®) was one of the most significant cancer drug development projects of the 20th century. Not only was it a scientific and medical achievement but it also paved the way for the drug-diagnostic codevelopment model, where a predictive biomarker assay is developed in parallel to the drug. One of the challenges in the development of trastuzumab was to select the right patient population likely to respond and here, it was critical to have access to an accurate, robust and reliable assay for detection of HER2 overexpression in tumors. In the clinical development of trastuzumab, a clinical trial assay (CTA), developed by Genentech, was used for selection of HER2 positive patients. However, during the phase III trial with trastuzumab, a new optimized IHC assay, HercepTest™ was designed and developed by Dako. In the final stage of its development, a comparative study with the CTA was conducted in order to show concordance between the two assays. In September 1998, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) simultaneously granted approval to trastuzumab and HercepTest™. The assay has been used for patient selection in a number of significant breast cancer clinical trials such as the HERA, CLEOPATRA, EMILIA and more. In these trials, HercepTest™ demonstrated its clinical utility in the neoadjuvant, adjuvant, and metastatic setting as well as in relation to different types of HER2 targeted therapies. Likewise, the assay was used for selection of HER2 positive gastric cancer patients in the important ToGA trail. HercepTest™ was the first companion diagnostic ever approved by the FDA, and more than 20 years of use has documented its clinical impact.

Highlights

  • In 2019, when Dennis Slamon, Axel Ullrich, and Michael Shepard received the Lasker-DeBakey Clinical Medical Research Award, the New England Journal of Medicine published an article by the former American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) president Daniel Hayes, entitled ‘HER2 and Breast Cancer - A Phenomenal Success Story’ [1]

  • In the early clinical development of trastuzumab, the clinical trial assay (CTA) was used for patient selection and the different clinical trials demonstrated a link between HER2 overexpression and the efficacy of trastuzumab [8,9,10]

  • HercepTestTM has played a significant role in the development of HER2 targeted therapy and the treatment of thousands of patients with breast and gastric cancer

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Summary

Introduction

In 2019, when Dennis Slamon, Axel Ullrich, and Michael Shepard received the Lasker-DeBakey Clinical Medical Research Award, the New England Journal of Medicine published an article by the former American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) president Daniel Hayes, entitled ‘HER2 and Breast Cancer - A Phenomenal Success Story’ [1]. Throughout all phases of the clinical development of trastuzumab, an IHC assay called the CTA developed by Genentech was used to detect HER2 tumor overexpression in possible eligible study patients with breast cancer.

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