Background Adjuvant trastuzumab significantly improves outcomes for patients with HER2-positive early breast cancer. The standard treatment duration is 12 months but shorter treatment could provide similar efficacy while reducing toxicities and cost. We aimed to investigate whether 6-month adjuvant trastuzumab treatment is noninferior to the standard 12-month treatment regarding disease-free survival. Methods This study is an open-label, randomised phase 3 non-inferiority trial. Patients were recruited from 152 centres in the UK. We randomly assigned patients with HER2-positive early breast cancer, aged 18 years or older, and with a clear indication for chemotherapy, by a computerised minimisation process (1:1), to receive either 6-month or 12-month trastuzumab delivered every 3 weeks intravenously (loading dose of 8 mg/kg followed by maintenance doses of 6 mg/kg) or subcutaneously (600 mg), given in combination with chemotherapy (concurrently or sequentially). The primary endpoint was disease-free survival, analysed by intention to treat, with a non-inferiority margin of 3% for 4-year disease-free survival. Safety was analysed in all patients who received trastuzumab. This trial is registered with EudraCT (number 2006-007018-39), ISRCTN (number 52968807), and ClinicalTrials.gov (number NCT00712140).
Management of metastatic TNBC remains a challenge. Chemotherapy is the mainstay of treatment but benefits are frequently short-lived with rapid development of resistance. The PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway has been implicated in many ways in TNBC, making inhibition of AKT an attractive therapeutic target. Based on downstream pathway activation signatures, PI3K pathway activation appears higher in TNBC compared to other molecular subtypes, despite a relatively low percentage of activating PI3K mutations. Alternative means of activating the PI3K pathway have been identified in TNBC, including loss or mutation of PTEN (up to 35%) and INPP4B (up to 30%) and/or amplification of PIK3CA, AKT2 or AKT3, resulting in increased activation of AKT. Induction of AKT by chemotherapy can be an early compensatory mechanism that can be exploited therapeutically to increase the efficacy of chemotherapy. Preclinical TNBC models with activated AKT signalling have been shown to be highly sensitive to AKT inhibitors. AZD5363 is a potent pan-AKT inhibitor with good oral bioavailability. Multiple lines of investigation have demonstrated strong synergistic effects between AKT inhibition and taxane chemotherapy in models of TNBC both in vitro and in vivo, providing rationale for the combination of AZD5363 and paclitaxel in TNBC. PAKT is designed to test the hypothesis that inhibition of AKT will increase the anti-tumour activity of paclitaxel chemotherapy in TNBC. The study will try to characterize those patients who may benefit from this treatment to identify potential predictors of sensitivity. PAKT is an international investigator led and sponsored, double-blind, placebo controlled, randomised phase II trial. Patients are randomised 1:1 to receive paclitaxel weekly (90mg/m2) on days 1,8, and 15 plus AZD5363 (400mgBD) or placebo (400mgBD) on days 2-5, 9-12, 15-19 (28 day treatment cycles). Patients are stratified by the number of metastatic sites and the interval from the end of adjuvant chemotherapy. Treatment is given until disease progression (RECIST 1.1), intolerable toxicity or elective withdrawal. Tumour assessments are carried out every 8 weeks. PAKT enrols patients with histologically documented locally advanced/metastatic TNBC (ER≤Allred2, PR≤Allred2, HER2=0,1+or2+), no prior systemic therapy for advanced TNBC, ECOG PS 0-2 and measurable disease per RECIST v1.1. Patients with brain metastases, significant cardiovascular disease, motor polyneuropathy are excluded. The primary endpoint is progression-free survival. Secondary endpoints are objective response rate, change in tumour size, clinical benefit rate, overall survival, duration of response, and patient reported outcomes. Archival tumour tissue must be available to evaluate potential biomarkers associated with therapeutic response and resistance. PFS will be compared between treatment arms by the stratified log-rank test. HR for disease progression/death will be estimated using a stratified Cox proportional hazards model. Kaplan-Meier methodology will be used to estimate the median PFS for each arm. Approximately 140 patients will be enrolled at ≈65 sites in the UK, France, Hungary, Romania, Georgia & South Korea. Citation Format: Schmid P, Wheatley D, Baird R, Chan S, Abraham J, Tutt A, Kristeleit H, Patel G, Bathakur U, Bishop J, Harper-Wynne C, Sims E, Copson E, Perren T, Stein R, Poole C, Cartwright H, Sarker S-J, Mousa K, Turner N. A phase II, double blind, randomised, placebo-controlled study of the AKT Inhibitor AZD5363 in combination with paclitaxel in triple-negative advanced or metastatic breast cancer (TNBC)(NCT02423603). [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the Thirty-Eighth Annual CTRC-AACR San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium: 2015 Dec 8-12; San Antonio, TX. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2016;76(4 Suppl):Abstract nr OT1-03-13.
Central nervous system (CNS) malignancies vary widely in their morphological and clinical characteristics, the varying patient groups affected, as well as in terms of outcome. Of all the CNS malignancies, glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is arguably the most devastating. In spite of practice-changing studies in recent years that have impacted favourably on the outcome in GBM, the prognosis remains limited. This chapter focusses on a typical case of a previously fit and well middle-aged patient presenting with symptoms of raised intracranial pressure (ICP) who is found to have GBM. Building on the case and management of this patient, it details standard first-line management of the condition with surgery, chemoradiation, and chemotherapy, exploring the evidence behind current clinical practice. Additional information is given on subtopics such as the management of seizures and raised ICP, the clinical and radiological phenomenon of pseudoprogression, as well as MGMT promoter methylation and its significance in the management of patients with GBM.
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