Immune markers and tumor-related processes predict neoadjuvant therapy response in the wsg-adapt her2-positive/hormone receptor-positive trial in early breast cancer

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Abstract

Prognostic or predictive biomarkers in HER2-positive early breast cancer (EBC) may inform treatment optimization. The ADAPT HER2-positive/hormone receptor-positive phase II trial (NCT01779206) demonstrated pathological complete response (pCR) rates of ~40% following de-escalated treatment with 12 weeks neoadjuvant ado-trastuzumab emtansine (T-DM1) ± endocrine therapy. In this exploratory analysis, we evaluated potential early predictors of response to neoad-juvant therapy. The effects of PIK3CA mutations and immune (CD8 and PD-L1) and apoptotic markers (BCL2 and MCL1) on pCR rates were assessed, along with intrinsic BC subtypes. Immune response and pCR were lower in PIK3CA-mutated tumors compared with wildtype. Increased BCL2 at baseline in all patients and at Cycle 2 in the T-DM1 arms was associated with lower pCR. In the T-DM1 arms only, the HER2-enriched subtype was associated with increased pCR rate (54% vs. 28%). These findings support further prospective pCR-driven de-escalation studies in patients with HER2-positive EBC.

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Harbeck, N., von Schumann, R., Kates, R. E., Braun, M., Kuemmel, S., Schumacher, C., … Gluz, O. (2021). Immune markers and tumor-related processes predict neoadjuvant therapy response in the wsg-adapt her2-positive/hormone receptor-positive trial in early breast cancer. Cancers, 13(19). https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13194884

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