Abstract

Simple SummaryPatients with “HER2-positive” early breast cancer are treated with antibodies to the HER2 protein along with chemotherapy, regardless of whether their cancer also has hormone receptors, or of its molecular features. Because patients with HER2-positive/hormone receptor-positive disease tend to live longer than those with HER2-positive/hormone receptor-negative disease, there may be some patients who are being overtreated under current guidelines. The aim of our exploratory translational analysis of the ADAPT HER2-positive/hormone receptor-positive trial was to investigate the potential of several prognostic (outcome regardless of therapy) and predictive (effect of therapy) biomarkers as early predictors of response to treatment before surgery. Comparison of these biomarkers before and after one treatment cycle, and their effects on whether patients’ cancers were completely removed at surgery, suggest that certain patients (those with treatment-induced CD8 protein-expressing cells infiltrating the cancer; without PIK3CA mutation; those with HER2-enriched tumors) may be candidates for less intensive treatment following pre-surgical therapy.Prognostic or predictive biomarkers in HER2-positive early breast cancer (EBC) may inform treatment optimization. The ADAPT HER2-positive/hormone receptor-positive phase II trial (NCT01779206) demonstrated pathological complete response (pCR) rates of ~40% following de-escalated treatment with 12 weeks neoadjuvant ado-trastuzumab emtansine (T-DM1) ± endocrine therapy. In this exploratory analysis, we evaluated potential early predictors of response to neoadjuvant therapy. The effects of PIK3CA mutations and immune (CD8 and PD-L1) and apoptotic markers (BCL2 and MCL1) on pCR rates were assessed, along with intrinsic BC subtypes. Immune response and pCR were lower in PIK3CA-mutated tumors compared with wildtype. Increased BCL2 at baseline in all patients and at Cycle 2 in the T-DM1 arms was associated with lower pCR. In the T-DM1 arms only, the HER2-enriched subtype was associated with increased pCR rate (54% vs. 28%). These findings support further prospective pCR-driven de-escalation studies in patients with HER2-positive EBC.

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