Abstract

Abstract Background: Although survival rates for patients with advanced breast cancer (BC) have improved overall, rates of BC brain metastases (BCBM) have increased over the past two decades, occurring in up to 15% to 30% of patients. BCBM greatly reduce quality of life and overall survival (OS) and are now the leading cause of BC patient mortality. Patients with primary HER2+ and triple negative BC (TNBC) are at highest risk for BM. Locoregional therapy with surgery and radiation are currently standard of care (SOC), but these treatments have significant morbidity and BCBM progressing despite these interventions are hard to treat. Systemic therapies to reduce cognitive impairment and increase survival are desperately needed, particularly in HER2-negative patients. Currently, immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) and small molecules such as PARP inhibitors are among the limited systemic options that have BCBM activity in HER2-negative BC. However, the benefit of these therapies is limited to a select group of patients. For example, androgen receptor (AR) is expressed in 60-80% of all BC and, in our recently completed clinical trial (NCT03206203), patients with AR+ metastatic TNBC treated with carboplatin +/- atezolizumab received no clinical benefit from the addition of atezolizumab. Alternatives to ICIs are needed for patients with AR+ TNBC. HER2-low (H2L) BC is a newly defined subset of HER2-negative BC with a HER2 immunohistochemical (IHC) score of 1+ ( >10%) or 2+/in situ hybridization (ISH) negative phenotype. Recent clinical trials have demonstrated significant clinical benefit from novel HER2 antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) in treating H2L BC. Trastuzumab-deruxtecan (T-Dxd), a HER2-directing ADC (topoisomerase I inhibitor conjugated to a humanized HER2-targeted antibody) was recently FDA approved as the first targeted therapy to treat H2L BC and can penetrate the blood–brain barrier. DESTINY-Breast04 demonstrated notable PFS and OS benefit of T-DXd compared to SOC in patients with H2L metastatic BC and included 61 patients with BCBM (results anticipated shortly). The overall rates of AR and H2L expression in patients with BCBM is unknown. The goal of this study is to investigate the prevalence of AR and HER2-low expression in a large cohort of BCBM treated at our institution. Methods: We retrospectively assessed rates of H2L and AR positivity (AR+) among patients with BCBM whose treatment included surgery at our institution between 2005-2023. Results were correlated with clinical receptor status (HR+/HER2-, HER2+/HR+, HER2+/HR- and TNBC) and clinical characteristics. Results of ER, PR, and HER2 testing performed for clinical purposes on the brain metastases and primary tumors were obtained from pathology reports. We retrieved formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue blocks of the brain metastases and performed IHC for AR (SP107) and prognostic markers for cases with missing data. Results: We identified 101 cases of BCBM. Based on clinical prognostic markers, BCBM subtypes were HR+/HER2- (22%), HR+/HER2+ (14%), HER2+/HR- (21%) and TNBC (43%). Forty-five percent of the BCBM (n=45) were AR+ ( >10%) and 24% (n=24) demonstrated > 50% AR+. Among tumors with >50% AR+, 42% (n=10) are H2L (7 HR+[30%] and 3 TNBC [13%]). Forty-two percent of BCBM were H2L. Among the HER2-negative BCBM (n= 66), 64% (n=42) were H2L, including 23 of 44 TNBC (52%) and 19 of 22 HR+ (86)%. Fifteen percent of BMBC changed clinical subtype from the primary, including conversion to TNBC and H2L. Conclusion: AR+ positive (24% > 50% expression) and HER2-Low expressing (42%) tumors represent a significant proportion of our BCBM cohort providing exciting new options for treatment. Trials re-evaluating AR antagonists in combination with SOC utilizing high AR+ thresholds may benefit patients with BCBM. At least 10% of BCBM are both H2L and demonstrate >50% AR positivity providing the rationale for the combination of ADCs such as T-DXd and AR-targeted therapies for BCBM. Citation Format: Guadalupe Garcia, Paula Gonzalez-Ericsson, Brian Lehmann, Bret Mobley, Jennifer Pietenpol, Laura Kennedy, Ben Park, Melinda Sanders. High prevalence of HER2-Low and AR expression in breast cancer brain metastases provide novel therapeutic options [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 2023 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium; 2023 Dec 5-9; San Antonio, TX. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2024;84(9 Suppl):Abstract nr PS11-07.

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