Molecular landscape and efficacy of HER2-targeted therapy in patients with HER2-mutated metastatic breast cancer

  • Zongbi Yi
  • , Guohua Rong
  • , Yanfang Guan
  • , Jin Li
  • , Lianpeng Chang
  • , Hui Li
  • , Binliang Liu
  • , Wenna Wang
  • , Xiuwen Guan
  • , Quchang Ouyang
  • , Lixi Li
  • , Jingtong Zhai
  • , Chunxiao Li
  • , Lifeng Li
  • , Xuefeng Xia
  • , Ling Yang
  • , Haili Qian
  • , Xin Yi
  • , Binghe Xu
  • , Fei Ma

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

55 Scopus citations

Abstract

Human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) protein overexpression or gene amplification is an important predictive biomarker for identifying patients with breast cancer, who may benefit from HER2-targeted therapy. However, little is known about the molecular landscape and efficacy of HER2-targeted therapy in patients with HER2-mutated metastatic breast cancer. We analysed the HER2 mutation features of 1184 patients with invasive breast cancer. In addition, a single-arm, prospective, phase-II study (NCT03412383) of pyrotinib was conducted in patient with metastatic HER2 amplification-negative, mutation-positive breast cancer. Peripheral blood was collected from each patient and circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) sequencing was performed using a 1021 gene panel. HER2 mutations were detected in 8.9% (105/1184) of patients. The HER2 amplification-positive patients had a higher mutation frequency than the HER2 amplification-negative patients (19.5% vs. 4.8%, P < 0.001). A multivariate Cox regression analysis indicated that patients with HER2 mutations had a shorter progression-free survival (PFS) than HER2 wild-type patients (median PFS 4.7 months vs. 11.0 months, hazard ratio 2.65, 95% confidence interval 1.25–5.65, P = 0.011). Ten HER2 amplification-negative, mutation-positive patients who received pyrotinib monotherapy were ultimately included in the efficacy analysis. The median PFS was 4.9 months. The objective response rate (complete response + partial response) was 40.0% and the clinical benefit rate (complete response + partial response + stable disease over 24 weeks) was 60%. In conclusion, a HER2 gene mutation analysis is potentially useful to identify biomarkers of trastuzumab resistance in HER2 amplification-positive patients. Patients with HER2-mutated, non-amplified metastatic breast cancers may benefit from pyrotinib.

Original languageEnglish
Article number59
Journalnpj Breast Cancer
Volume6
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Dec 2020

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