5 research outputs found
Effect of Pembrolizumab Plus Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy on Pathologic Complete Response in Women With Early-Stage Breast Cancer: An Analysis of the Ongoing Phase 2 Adaptively Randomized I-SPY2 Trial.
Importance: Approximately 25% of patients with early-stage breast cancer who receive (neo)adjuvant chemotherapy experience a recurrence within 5 years. Improvements in therapy are greatly needed.
Objective: To determine if pembrolizumab plus neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT) in early-stage breast cancer is likely to be successful in a 300-patient, confirmatory randomized phase 3 neoadjuvant clinical trial.
Design, Setting, and Participants: The I-SPY2 study is an ongoing open-label, multicenter, adaptively randomized phase 2 platform trial for high-risk, stage II/III breast cancer, evaluating multiple investigational arms in parallel. Standard NACT serves as the common control arm; investigational agent(s) are added to this backbone. Patients with ERBB2 (formerly HER2)-negative breast cancer were eligible for randomization to pembrolizumab between November 2015 and November 2016.
Interventions: Participants were randomized to receive taxane- and anthracycline-based NACT with or without pembrolizumab, followed by definitive surgery.
Main Outcomes and Measures: The primary end point was pathologic complete response (pCR). Secondary end points were residual cancer burden (RCB) and 3-year event-free and distant recurrence-free survival. Investigational arms graduated when demonstrating an 85% predictive probability of success in a hypothetical confirmatory phase 3 trial.
Results: Of the 250 women included in the final analysis, 181 were randomized to the standard NACT control group (median [range] age, 47 [24.77] years). Sixty-nine women (median [range] age, 50 [27-71] years) were randomized to 4 cycles of pembrolizumab in combination with weekly paclitaxel followed by AC; 40 hormone receptor (HR)-positive and 29 triple-negative. Pembrolizumab graduated in all 3 biomarker signatures studied. Final estimated pCR rates, evaluated in March 2017, were 44% vs 17%, 30% vs 13%, and 60% vs 22% for pembrolizumab vs control in the ERBB2-negative, HR-positive/ERBB2-negative, and triple-negative cohorts, respectively. Pembrolizumab shifted the RCB distribution to a lower disease burden for each cohort evaluated. Adverse events included immune-related endocrinopathies, notably thyroid abnormalities (13.0%) and adrenal insufficiency (8.7%). Achieving a pCR appeared predictive of long-term outcome, where patients with pCR following pembrolizumab plus chemotherapy had high event-free survival rates (93% at 3 years with 2.8 years\u27 median follow-up).
Conclusions and Relevance: When added to standard neoadjuvant chemotherapy, pembrolizumab more than doubled the estimated pCR rates for both HR-positive/ERBB2-negative and triple-negative breast cancer, indicating that checkpoint blockade in women with early-stage, high-risk, ERBB2-negative breast cancer is highly likely to succeed in a phase 3 trial. Pembrolizumab was the first of 10 agents to graduate in the HR-positive/ERBB2-negative signature.
Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01042379
Maintenance of Tolerance by Regulation of Anti-myeloperoxidase B Cells
Anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibodies directed toward myeloperoxidase or proteinase 3 are detected in sera of patients with small vessel vasculitis and participate in the pathogenesis of this disease. Autoantibodies develop when self-reactive B cells escape the regulation that ensures self-tolerance. In this study, regulation of anti-myeloperoxidase B cells was examined in mice that express an anti-myeloperoxidase Vκ1C-Jκ5 light-chain transgene, which confers anti-myeloperoxidase specificity when combined with a variety of heavy chains. Vκ1C-Jκ5 transgenic mice have splenic anti-myeloperoxidase B cells but do not produce circulating anti-myeloperoxidase antibodies. Two groups of transgenic mice that differed by their relative dosage of the transgene were compared; high-copy mice had a mean relative transgene dosage of 1.92 compared with 1.02 in the low-copy mice. These mice exhibited a 90 and 60% decrease in mature follicular B cells, respectively. High-copy mice were characterized by a large population of anti-myeloperoxidase B cells, a preponderance of B-1 cells, and an increased percentage of apoptotic myeloperoxidase-binding B cells. Low-copy mice had similar changes in B cell phenotype with the exception of an expanded marginal zone population. B cells from low-copy mice but not high-copy mice produced anti-myeloperoxidase antibodies after stimulation with lipopolysaccharide. These results indicate that tolerance to myeloperoxidase is maintained by central and peripheral deletion and that some myeloperoxidase-binding B cells are positively selected into the marginal zone and B-1 B cell subsets. A defect in these regulatory pathways could result in autoimmune disease
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Ganitumab and metformin plus standard neoadjuvant therapy in stage 2/3 breast cancer.
I-SPY2 is an adaptively randomized phase 2 clinical trial evaluating novel agents in combination with standard-of-care paclitaxel followed by doxorubicin and cyclophosphamide in the neoadjuvant treatment of breast cancer. Ganitumab is a monoclonal antibody designed to bind and inhibit function of the type I insulin-like growth factor receptor (IGF-1R). Ganitumab was tested in combination with metformin and paclitaxel (PGM) followed by AC compared to standard-of-care alone. While pathologic complete response (pCR) rates were numerically higher in the PGM treatment arm for hormone receptor-negative, HER2-negative breast cancer (32% versus 21%), this small increase did not meet I-SPY\u27s prespecified threshold for graduation. PGM was associated with increased hyperglycemia and elevated hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c), despite the use of metformin in combination with ganitumab. We evaluated several putative predictive biomarkers of ganitumab response (e.g., IGF-1 ligand score, IGF-1R signature, IGFBP5 expression, baseline HbA1c). None were specific predictors of response to PGM, although several signatures were associated with pCR in both arms. Any further development of anti-IGF-1R therapy will require better control of anti-IGF-1R drug-induced hyperglycemia and the development of more predictive biomarkers