New anti-HER2 therapies have greatly improved clinical outcomes in HER2-positive breast cancer, but tumor resistance to HER2-directed therapies remains a significant problem that has spurred the development of a number of targeted therapies directed at non-HER2 pathways in this disease. Here we review major mechanisms of resistance to anti-HER2 therapies identified in the preclinical and clinical setting, as well as the preclinical and clinical status of the major categories of novel non–HER2-targeted therapies in clinical development. These include CDK4/6 inhibitors, PI3K/mTOR pathway inhibitors, antiangiogenic agents, inhibitors of bypass signaling through non-HER growth factors, including insulin-like growth factor 1 receptor, fibroblast growth factor receptor, and c-MET, and advances in immunotherapy, including checkpoint inhibitors and cancer vaccines.
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