Abstract

Eribulin prolongs overall survival in patients with pre-treated advanced breast cancer. However, no biomarker exists to prospectively select patients who will benefit the most from this drug. SOLTI-1007-NeoEribulin is a phase II, open-label, two-cohort, exploratory pharmacogenomic study in patients with clinical stage I–II HER2-negative breast cancer receiving neoadjuvant eribulin monotherapy treatment. Primary objective was to explore the association of baseline tumor gene expression with pathological complete response in the breast (pCRB) at surgery. Key secondary objectives were pCRB rates in all patients and according to HR status, gene expression changes during treatment and safety. One-hundred one hormonal receptor-positive (HR + ) and seventy-three triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) patients were recruited. The pCRB rates were 6.4% in all patients, 4.9% in HR + disease and 8.2% in TNBC. The TNBC cohort was interrupted due to a progression disease rate of 30.1%. The pCRB rates differed according to intrinsic subtypes: 28.6% in HER2-enriched, 11.1% in Normal-like, 7.9% in Luminal B, 5.9% in Basal-like and 0% in Luminal A (HER2-enriched vs. others odds ratio = 7.05, 95% CI 1.80–42.14; p-value = 0.032). Intrinsic subtype changes at surgery occurred in 33.3% of cases, mostly (49.0%) Luminal B converting to Luminal A or Basal-like converting to Normal-like. Baseline tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) were significantly associated with pCR. Eribulin showed a good safety profile with a low response and pCRB rates. Patients with HER2-negative disease with a HER2-enriched profile may benefit the most from eribulin. In addition, significant biological activity of eribulin is observed in Luminal B and Basal-like subtypes.

Highlights

  • Eribulin is a non-taxane microtubule polymerization inhibitor recommended for advanced HER2-negative breast cancer progressing to 1–2 prior chemotherapeutic regimens, including anthracyclines and taxanes[1]

  • Our study describes a framework for assessing the biology behind this non-taxane microtubule dynamics inhibitor in HER2-negative primary breast cancer

  • Gene expression of 156 patients treated with eribulin and its correlation with efficacy suggest that single genes and genes signatures as molecular subtypes are modulated and play a role in responses to eribulin

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Summary

Introduction

Eribulin is a non-taxane microtubule polymerization inhibitor recommended for advanced HER2-negative breast cancer progressing to 1–2 prior chemotherapeutic regimens, including anthracyclines and taxanes[1]. Approval of eribulin monotherapy was based on the results of the EMBRACE phase III trial[2], which showed a statistically significant overall survival (OS) advantage vs treatment of physician’s choice (13.1 vs 10.6 months; hazard ratio 0.81, p = 0.041)[2]. No biomarker exists to date with the ability to predict benefit from eribulin within HER2-negative breast cancer. SOLTI-1007 NeoEribulin (NCT01669252) is an open-label phase II pharmacogenomic study of single agent eribulin as neoadjuvant treatment for operable Stage I–II HER2-negative breast cancer. The main purpose of this study was to identify potential predictive biomarkers of eribulin efficacy in HER2-negative breast cancer

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