Safety in Japanese Advanced Breast Cancer Patients Who Received Abemaciclib in MONARCH 2 and MONARCH 3: Assessment of Treatment-Emergent Neutropenia, Diarrhea, and Increased Alanine Aminotransferase and Aspartate Aminotransferase Levels

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Abstract

Purpose: Our objective was to gain a better understanding of the safety of abemaciclib in Japanese patients with hormone receptor-positive, human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative advanced breast cancer. Patients and Methods: Treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) were assessed in pooled Japanese subpopulation data from two phase 3 studies assessing abemaciclib/placebo in combination with fulvestrant (MONARCH 2; M2) or non-steroidal aromatase inhibitors (MONARCH 3; M3). For common, clinically relevant TEAEs, event characteristics and management were summarized by study. Results: In the Japanese safety subpopulation (abemaciclib: N=101; placebo: N=46), all patients experienced ≥1 TEAE (Grade ≥ 3: abemaciclib, 71.3%; placebo, 23.9%; no Grade 5). Clinically relevant TEAEs that were more frequent in abemaciclib-treated Japanese patients compared to the overall safety populations included diarrhea (any grade, 95.0%; Grade ≥ 3, 12.9%), neutropenia (any grade, 75.2%; Grade 3–4, 35.6%), increased alanine aminotransferase (ALT; any grade, 39.6%; Grade 3–4, 14.9%), and increased aspartate aminotransferase (AST; any grade, 37.6%; Grade 3–4, 8.9%). Diarrhea was Grade ≤3 and successfully managed with medications (≥87%) and dose reductions (≤25%) and/ or omissions (≤23.3%). Most Grade ≥2 diarrhea occurred in the first treatment cycle, declining thereafter. Neutropenia, the most common Grade ≥3 TEAE in abemaciclib-treated Japanese patients, was generally manageable with dose omissions (M2: 42.0%; M3: 23.1%) and/or reductions (M2: 16%; M3: 15.4%). Neutrophil counts plateaued after Cycle 2, recovering to pretreatment levels after discontinuation of abemaciclib. Hepatic events were managed with medication (≤21%) and dose adjustments (≤33.3%), with most Grade ≥2 events occurring in early treatment cycles. Discontinuation of any study treatment in Japanese patients occurred more frequently due to increased ALT/AST (M2: 9.1%/10.5%; M3: 16.7%/10.5%) compared with diarrhea (M2: 0%; M3: 2.8%) or neutropenia (M2: 0%; M3: 3.8%). Conclusion: Abemaciclib was well tolerated in Japanese patients in MONARCH 2 and MONARCH 3, with common, clinically relevant TEAEs manageable with appropriate interventions.

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Masuda, N., Chen, Y., Kawaguchi, T., Dozono, K., & Toi, M. (2022). Safety in Japanese Advanced Breast Cancer Patients Who Received Abemaciclib in MONARCH 2 and MONARCH 3: Assessment of Treatment-Emergent Neutropenia, Diarrhea, and Increased Alanine Aminotransferase and Aspartate Aminotransferase Levels. Cancer Management and Research, 14, 1179–1194. https://doi.org/10.2147/CMAR.S348591

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