Back to Search Start Over

Endocrine‐based treatments in clinically‐relevant subgroups of hormone receptor‐positive/her2‐negative metastatic breast cancer: Systematic review and meta‐analysis

Authors :
Mothaffar F. Rimawi
Grazia Arpino
Angelo Di Leo
Fabiola Giudici
Pietro De Placido
Sergio Venturini
Mario Giuliano
Lajos Pusztai
Sabino De Placido
Lucia Del Mastro
Guy Jerusalem
Daniele Generali
Michelino De Laurentiis
Fabio Puglisi
Francesco Schettini
Carla Rognoni
Aleix Prat
Benedetta Conte
Rachel Schiff
Mariavittoria Locci
Pierfranco Conte
Schettini, F.
Giuliano, M.
Giudici, F.
Conte, B.
De Placido, P.
Venturini, S.
Rognoni, C.
Leo, A. D.
Locci, M.
Jerusalem, G.
Mastro, L. D.
Puglisi, F.
Conte, P.
De Laurentiis, M.
Pusztai, L.
Rimawi, M. F.
Schiff, R.
Arpino, G.
De Placido, S.
Prat, A.
Generali, D.
Schettini, Francesco
Giuliano, Mario
Giudici, Fabiola
Conte, Benedetta
De Placido, Pietro
Venturini, Sergio
Rognoni, Carla
Di Leo, Angelo
Locci, Mariavittoria
Jerusalem, Guy
Del Mastro, Lucia
Puglisi, Fabio
Conte, Pierfranco
De Laurentiis, Michelino
Pusztai, Lajo
Rimawi, Mothaffar F.
Schiff, Rachel
Arpino, Grazia
De Placido, Sabino
Prat, Aleix
Generali, Daniele
Source :
Cancers, Cancers, Vol 13, Iss 1458, p 1458 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Simple Summary Hormone receptor-positive (HR+)/HER2-negative is the most frequent subgroup of metastatic breast cancer (MBC). Important therapeutic advances in the treatment of this tumor type have been observed in the last 20 years, with the approval of numerous endocrine therapies (ET) with or without target therapies (TT). To improve our current knowledge and support clinical decision-making, we conducted a systematic literature and meta-analysis focused on the most relevant/promising first-/second-line ET ± TT of the last 20 years. We observed that CDK4/6-inhibitors(i) + ET were the most effective regimens. At the same time, mTORi-based combinations proved to be a valid therapeutic option in endocrine-resistant tumors, as well as PI3Ki + ET in PIK3CA-mutant patients. Single agent ET might still be a valuable upfront treatment in endocrine sensitive and non-visceral disease. Abstract A precise assessment of the efficacy of first-/second-line endocrine therapies (ET) ± target therapies (TT) in clinically-relevant subgroups of hormone receptor-positive (HR+)/HER2-negative metastatic breast cancer (MBC) has not yet been conducted. To improve our current knowledge and support clinical decision-making, we thus conducted a systematic literature search to identify all first-/second-line phase II/III randomized clinical trials (RCT) of currently approved or most promising ET ± TT. Then, we performed a meta-analysis to assess progression-free (PFS) and/or overall survival (OS) benefit in several clinically-relevant prespecified subgroups. Thirty-five RCT were included (17,595 patients). Pooled results show significant reductions in the risk of relapse or death of 26–41% and 12–27%, respectively, depending on the clinical subgroup. Combination strategies proved to be more effective than single-agent ET (PFS hazard ratio (HR) range for combinations: 0.60–0.65 vs. HR range for single agent ET: 0.59–1.37; OS HR range for combinations: 0.74–0.87 vs. HR range for single agent ET: 0.68–0.98), with CDK4/6-inhibitors(i) + ET being the most effective regimen. Single agent ET showed comparable efficacy with ET+TT combinations in non-visceral (p = 0.63) and endocrine sensitive disease (p = 0.79), while mTORi-based combinations proved to be a valid therapeutic option in endocrine-resistant tumors, as well as PI3Ki + ET in PIK3CA-mutant tumors. These results strengthen international treatment guidelines and can aid therapeutic decision-making.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancers, Cancers, Vol 13, Iss 1458, p 1458 (2021)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....77086d2ad8b624c9d548593716a07171