Abstract
The incidence of gastroesophageal cancers is rising, driven, in part, by an increasing burden of risk factors of obesity and gastroesophageal reflux. Despite efforts to address these risk factors, and a growing interest in methods of population screening, the bulk of these tumours are unresectable at diagnosis. In this setting, effective systemic treatments are paramount to improve survival and quality of life. Early and accurate identification of oncogenic drivers, such as human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2), present in 5-30% of gastroesophageal adenocarcinomas (GEAs), is integral to guide choice of therapies due to the clear predictive implications that arise from overexpression of this receptor. After trastuzumab, the first anti-HER2 agent with approved use in HER2-positive GEA, the addition of pembrolizumab to first-line trastuzumab-chemotherapy and trastuzumab deruxtecan in the refractory space have more recently changed practice. Yet, the response to these agents has been vastly different across patients with HER2-positive disease, underpinning the need for reliable biomarkers of response. Emergent data have suggested that levels of HER2 expression on tissue or liquid biopsies may predict response to first-generation HER2 therapies while HER2 heterogeneity, receptor changes, co-occurring molecular alterations and oncogenic genomic and metabolic reprogramming may be implicated in resistance. A robust knowledge of the mechanisms of resistance and response to HER2-directed therapies is necessary to inform novel strategies of HER2-targeting and guide choice combinations with other biomarker-directed therapies, to improve outcomes from a new generation of clinical trials in HER2-positive GEA. Understanding and close examination of previous failures in this space form an important part of this assessment, as does correlative biomarker and translational work pertaining to the role of HER2 and dynamic changes that result through treatment exposure. In this review, we aim to provide an overview of strategies for HER2 targeting, summarising both the successes and disappointments in this therapeutic landscape and discuss existing challenges and future perspectives on development in this highly morbid tumour type.
Published Version
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