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Apatinib and trastuzumab-based chemotherapy for heavily treated primary trastuzumab-resistant metastatic breast cancer

Authors :
Chen, Xuelian
Huang, Jiayi
Xie, Xiaofeng
Chen, Liping
Lan, Xiaofeng
Song, Lin
Bai, Xue
Du, Caiwen
Source :
Journal of Cancer Research and Therapeutics. December 1, 2024, Vol. 20 Issue 7, p1991, 6 p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Author(s): Xuelian Chen [1]; Jiayi Huang [1]; Xiaofeng Xie [1]; Liping Chen [1]; Xiaofeng Lan [1]; Lin Song [1]; Xue Bai [1]; Caiwen Du (corresponding author) [1] INTRODUCTION Human epidermal [...]<br />Background: The low incidence and poor prognosis primary trastuzumab resistance (PTR) in HER2-positive breast cancer has limited research into possible treatments. Thus, it remains unclear whether this group of patients could benefit from nontargeting HER2 antiangiogenic therapy. Patients and Methods: We collected the medical data for HER2-positive patients with PTR who received apatinib 250 mg and trastuzumab-based chemotherapy (ATBC) between March 18, 2017, and March 31, 2022. All patients had progressed on ≥2 anti-HER2 treatments, including trastuzumab and small molecular tyrosine kinase inhibitors. We evaluated tumor response and safety profiles to ATBC over a median follow-up time of 34.5 months. Results: A total of 198 consecutively HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer patients were reviewed; 20 were PTR and received ATBC. The clinical benefit rate of the total cohort was 55.0. No patient showed a complete response. The median PFS and overall survival (OS) of the entire cohort was 5.7 months (95 CI 2.9-8.5) and 24.6 months (95 CI 6.9-42.4), respectively. The estimated 2-year survival rate was 46.7 (95 CI 38.4-81.6). The most common nonhematologic adverse events were hypertension (70.0), hand-foot skin reaction (55.0), proteinuria (40.0), and cardiovascular decrease of LVEF (20.0). No new toxicities were observed. Conclusion: ATBC had favorable effects for PTR breast cancer patients in later line treatment. The toxicity of the triple-combination regimen was tolerable; thus, further research should focus on identifying PTR patients who could benefit from ATBC. Keywords: Apatinib, breast cancer, primary trastuzumab resistance

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09731482
Volume :
20
Issue :
7
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
Journal of Cancer Research and Therapeutics
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
edsgcl.823038022
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.4103/jcrt.jcrt_979_24