Breast%20cancer Treatment
Preoperative Systemic Therapy
- Advantages of preoperative systemic therapy include possibility of breast conservation, possibility of making inoperable tumors operable, provision of prognostic information especially in patients with triple-negative breast cancer or HER2-positive breast cancer based on treatment response, identification of patients with residual disease at higher risk of relapse to allow additional supplemental adjuvant regimens especially in patients with triple-negative breast cancer or HER2-positive breast cancer, allowing time for genetic testing to be performed, allowing time for breast reconstruction planning inpatients who opt for mastectomy and allowing time for delayed decision-making for definitive surgery
- Preferred for patients with operable locally advanced breast cancer with HER2-positive disease, triple negative breast cancer if ≥T2 or ≥N1, with large primary tumor relative to breast size in favor of breast conservation, node-positive patients likely to be highly responsive to neoadjuvant chemotherapy, or until commencement of surgical treatment
- Indicated for patients with inoperable locally advanced breast cancer, including inflammatory tumors, those with bulky or matted N2 axillary nodes, N3 regional lymph node nodal disease and/or T4 tumors
- May be considered in patients with operable disease if patient opts for breast-conserving surgery but is not possible due to tumor size, those with tumor subtypes known to be responsive to preoperative systemic therapy, and for patients with T1N0 HER2-positive disease and triple negative breast cancer
- Not applicable in patients with extensive in situ disease with undefined disease extent, with poorly delineated extent of tumor, or with unpalpable or clinically unassessable tumors
- Neoadjuvant chemotherapy aims to eradicate or control undiscovered distant metastasis
- Neoadjuvant endocrine therapy may be considered in patients with strongly hormone receptor-positive tumors
- Neoadjuvant systemic therapy with Trastuzumab + Pertuzumab-based therapy is the recommended treatment option for patients with HER2-positive breast cancer who are candidates for neoadjuvant therapy
- Recommended sequence of adjuvant therapies:
- Endocrine therapy should be given after chemotherapy administration
- Adjuvant Olaparib and endocrine therapy may be given at the same time
- Chemotherapy may be followed by radiation therapy (RT), except for Capecitabine and Olaparib; Cyclophosphamide/Methotrexate/Fluorouracil (CMF) and RT may be administered at the same time or CMF may be given before RT
Preoperative Chemotherapy
- All chemotherapy administration before surgery is preferred
- Modalities used in adjuvant therapy may also be used eg endocrine and targeted therapy
- Purpose is to reduce tumor size which allows complete removal of the tumor with less extensive surgery
- Can convert inoperable tumors to viably operable tumors
- Can predict how the cancer cells respond to chemotherapeutic drugs
- Considered in women with large clinical stage IIA, IIB, and T3N1M0 tumors who meet the criteria for breast-conserving therapy except for tumor size and those who wish to undergo breast-conserving therapy
- Indications: Tumor size >2 cm (T2, T3), cancer does not involve the surrounding skin or chest wall, LN enlarged but movable
- Endocrine therapy alone, ie Tamoxifen or aromatase inhibitor (for postmenopausal women; administered with ovarian suppression to premenopausal women) may be given in hormone receptor-positive disease
- Patients with HER2-positive tumors should be treated with preoperative chemotherapy incorporating Trastuzumab with or without Pertuzumab for at least 9 weeks
Risk Reduction for Carcinoma in Situ
Tamoxifen
- Competitively binds to cytoplasmic ER in breast, uterus, vagina, anterior pituitary and tumors containing high levels of ER
- Competitive binding protects against development of breast cancer
- Decreases breast cancer risk in healthy premenopausal and postmenopausal women ≥35 years old
- More effective risk reduction agent for most pre-menopausal women who want a non-surgical risk reduction therapy but has more toxic effects
- May be considered as an adjuvant therapy in DCIS patients who underwent breast conservation therapy and radiation therapy in ER-positive DCIS; benefit of Tamoxifen in ER-negative DCIS is uncertain
- Reduces the risk of cancer recurrence on the ipsilateral breast
- Studies have shown that Tamoxifen can reduce the risk of invasive breast cancer in premenopausal and postmenopausal patients ≥35 years old with Gail Model 5-year breast cancer risk of ≥1.7% or with history of LCIS
- Used in ER-positive tumor
- Advised to be taken for 5 years
- Low-dose Tamoxifen (5 mg for 3 years) may be considered in patients with undesirable symptoms on standard dose or if unwilling or unable to take the standard dose
Raloxifene
- May be considered in postmenopausal patients with history of LCIS or ≥35 years old with Gail Model 5-year breast cancer risk of ≥1.7% who have contraindications to Tamoxifen therapy
- Long-term use was shown to be less effective but a safer risk reduction agent compared to Tamoxifen in postmenopausal women, in pregnant women or those planning a pregnancy
Aromatase Inhibitors
- Eg Anastrozole, Exemestrane
- Alternative to Tamoxifen in postmenopausal women with DCIS
- May be of advantage in postmenopausal patients <60 years old or with thromboembolism concerns
- May be considered in postmenopausal patients with history of LCIS or ≥35 years old with Gail Model 5-year breast cancer risk of ≥1.7% who have contraindications to Tamoxifen or Raloxifene therapy
Systemic Therapy for Invasive Breast Cancer
- Several combination treatment regimens are used for adjuvant chemotherapy
- Usually includes 4-12 cycles of taxane- and/or anthracycline-based regimen
- Chemotherapy response depends on ER status
- Platinum compounds may be given to BRCA1 patients; cells deficient of BRCA1 are hypersensitive to platinum compounds
- Complete preoperative chemotherapy after surgery if not completed
- Preferred time for initiation of adjuvant systemic therapy is within 3-6 weeks after surgery
- May substitute Paclitaxel or Docetaxel with albumin-bound Paclitaxel if deemed medically necessary (eg hypersensitivity reactions)
Trastuzumab
- Indicated for patients who are HER2 positive with (nonresponsive, incompletely or highly) endocrine-responsive tumors and low, intermediate or high-risk categories to decrease disease recurrence
- Indicated for patients with early breast cancer who are HER2 positive, given after surgery, adjuvant or neoadjuvant chemotherapy, and radiotherapy (if applicable)
- Can help slow cancer growth and may also stimulate the immune system to more effectively fight the cells
- Reduces risk of recurrence by half and improves survival
- Given to both premenopausal and postmenopausal patients
- May be given concurrently with a taxane following anthracycline or after completion of all chemotherapy
- One year is the accepted standard treatment duration
- Contraindicated in patients with low left ventricular ejection fraction (<50%)
- The antibody-linked Trastuzumab agent, Ado-trastuzumab or Trastuzumab emtansine, is used instead of Trastuzumab if with residual disease after preoperative therapy
- Subcutaneous Trastuzumab plus Hyaluronidase-oysk may be used in place of Trastuzumab
Trastuzumab Combinations (HER2-Positive Disease)
Preferred Adjuvant Regimens
- Docetaxel, Carboplatin, Trastuzumab (TCH)
- Docetaxel, Carboplatin, Trastuzumab, Pertuzumab (TCHP)
- Paclitaxel plus Trastuzumab
- May be considered for HER2-positive patients with low-risk T1N0M0 but with comorbidities not eligible for other adjuvant regimens
- Ado-trastuzumab emtansine: If with residual disease after preoperative therapy
- Trastuzumab with or without Pertuzumab: If Ado-trastuzumab emtansine therapy was discontinued due to toxicity or if no residual disease after preoperative therapy was seen or no preoperative therapy was given
- Extended adjuvant Neratinib should be considered in HR-positive, HER2-positive patients after treatment with Trastuzumab-containing regimen if at high risk for disease recurrence
Conditional Regimens
- Docetaxel plus Cyclophosphamide plus Trastuzumab
- Doxorubicin, Cyclophosphamide (AC) followed by Paclitaxel (T) plus Trastuzumab with or without Pertuzumab
- Neratinib: For adjuvant therapy; to be considered in HR-positive, HER2-positive patients after Trastuzumab-containing regimen with high risk of disease recurrence
- Paclitaxel plus Trastuzumab plus Pertuzumab
- Ado-trastuzumab emtansine (TDM-1): For adjuvant therapy
Other Recommended Regimens
- Doxorubicin, Cyclophosphamide (AC) followed by Docetaxel plus Trastuzumab with or without Pertuzumab
- Extended adjuvant Neratinib should be considered in HR-positive, HER2-positive patients after treatment with Trastuzumab-containing regimen if at high risk for disease recurrence
Non-Trastuzumab Combinations (HER2-Negative Disease)
Preferred Adjuvant Regimens
- Dose-dense Doxorubicin, Cyclophosphamide (AC) followed by Paclitaxel (T) every 2 weeks
- Dose-dense Doxorubicin, Cyclophosphamide (AC) followed by weekly Paclitaxel
- Docetaxel, Cyclophosphamide (TC)
- Capecitabine: For triple-negative breast cancer with residual disease after surgery and taxane-/alkylator-/anthracycline-based chemotherapy
- Olaparib: For patients with germline BRCA1/2 mutations and
- Triple-negative breast cancer, if with ≥pathologic T2 or ≥pathologic N1 disease after adjuvant chemotherapy, or residual disease after preoperative chemotherapy
- ER/PR-positive, HER2-negative tumors, if with ≥4 positive lymph nodes after adjuvant chemotherapy, or residual disease after preoperative therapy and a clinical stage, pathologic stage, ER status, and tumor grade (CPS+EG) score ≥3
- Preoperative Pembrolizumab + Carboplatin + Paclitaxel, followed by preoperative Pembrolizumab + Cyclophosphamide + Doxorubicin or Epirubicin, followed by adjuvant Pembrolizumab: For high-risk triple-negative breast cancer
Conditional Regimens
- Cyclophosphamide, Methotrexate, Fluorouracil (CMF)
- Dose-dense Doxorubicin, Cyclophosphamide (AC)
- Doxorubicin, Cyclophosphamide (AC) every 3 weeks
- Doxorubicin, Cyclophosphamide (AC) followed by weekly Paclitaxel
- Capecitabine: Maintenance therapy for triple-negative breast cancer chemotherapy after adjuvant chemotherapy
Other Recommended Regimens
- Doxorubicin, Cyclophosphamide (AC) followed by Docetaxel every 3 weeks
- Epirubicin, Cyclophosphamide (EC)
- Docetaxel, Doxorubicin, Cyclophosphamide (TAC)
- For triple-negative breast cancer: Paclitaxel + Carboplatin; Docetaxel + Carboplatin
Adjuvant Endocrine Therapy
- Offered to patients with detectable expression of HR (≥1% invasive cancer cells)
- Minimum duration of therapy is 5 years but recent data suggest that extending therapy for an additional 5 years reduces risk recurrence and improves disease-free survival
- Discussion should be made with the patient regarding the benefits and risks of extended therapy
- Sequential administration of hormone therapy after chemotherapy is recommended for patients with high-risk features (eg lymph node metastasis, unknown recurrence score, intermediate to high recurrence score)
Recommended Adjuvant Endocrine Therapy for Premenopausal Women
- Any of the following:
- Tamoxifen for 5 years with or without ovarian suppression or ablation or
- Aromatase inhibitor for 5 years with ovarian suppression or ablation
- May consider continuing aromatase inhibitor treatment for another 3-5 years
- If patient becomes amenorrheic while on the 5-year Tamoxifen therapy, assessment of FSH, LH and estradiol levels should be done to confirm menopause
- Aromatase inhibitor therapy should be started to be given for 5 years
- Consider continuing Tamoxifen therapy for another 5 years to complete 10 years
- Continuation of Tamoxifen therapy for up to 10 years should be considered for patients who remain premenopausal 5 years after initiation of adjuvant endocrine therapy
- Tamoxifen therapy is also recommended for men with breast cancer, and may use a GnRH analogue with aromatase inhibitor if Tamoxifen use is contraindicated
Recommended Adjuvant Endocrine Therapy for Postmenopausal Women
- Any of the following:
- Aromatase inhibitor for 5 years or
- May consider continuing treatment for another 3-5 years
- Aromatase inhibitor for 2-3 years followed by Tamoxifen to complete the 5-year treatment duration or
- Tamoxifen for 2-3 years followed by 1 of the following: or
- Aromatase inhibitor to complete the 5-year treatment duration
- Aromatase inhibitor for 5 years
- Tamoxifen for 4.5-6 years followed by aromatase inhibitor for 5 years or Tamoxifen therapy for additional 5 years to complete the 10-year duration or
- Tamoxifen monotherapy of 5-10 years should only be considered in patients with contraindications to or opposed to aromatase inhibitor therapy
- Aromatase inhibitor for 5 years or
Aromatase Inhibitors
- Eg Anastrozole, Exemestane, Letrozole
- Adjuvant treatment in postmenopausal patients with ER-positive, stages I and II (tumor size <5 cm) invasive carcinoma
- Based on randomized controlled trials, relative to Tamoxifen, aromatase inhibitors improve clinical outcomes in patients with early ER-positive invasive breast cancer; however, treatment was associated with increased drug costs and slight decrease in follow-up costs compared to Tamoxifen
- Have the same anti-tumor efficacy and toxicity profiles
- Anastrozole is recommended for primary adjuvant therapy
- Exemestane is used as adjuvant therapy following 2-3 years of adjuvant Tamoxifen therapy
- Letrozole is recommended for primary and extended adjuvant therapy following standard Tamoxifen therapy
Tamoxifen
- First-line adjuvant endocrine therapy in both pre- and postmenopausal breast cancer patients
Systemic Therapy for Recurrent Unresectable or Metastatic Breast Cancer
- Consider a taxane- or anthracycline-based regimen
- Sequential monotherapy rather than concomitant use is recommended
- Considered as first-line agents for patients with HER2-negative metastatic breast cancer who have not yet been on these regimens as (neo)adjuvant therapy and for whom treatment with chemotherapy is appropriate
- If taxane-naive and with history of resistance to anthracycline or with anthracycline maximum cumulative dose or toxicity but is being considered for further chemotherapy, single-agent taxane-based therapy is preferred
- Monotherapy with Capecitabine, Vinorelbine or Eribulin may be considered in patients previously given a taxane- or anthracycline-based therapy without indications for combination regimens
- No evidence states that combination regimens are superior to sequential single agents
- HER2-directed therapy, either as a single agent, combined with chemotherapy or with endocrine therapy, should be proposed early to patients with HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer
- If without contraindications, further anti-HER2 therapy should be considered in patients with HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer who relapsed following adjuvant or any line metastatic anti-HER2 treatment
- Metronomic chemotherapy may be considered in patients with advanced breast cancer not needing immediate tumor response
HER2-Negative Disease
- Combination regimen may be used for patients with high tumor burden, rapidly progressive disease, and visceral crisis
Preferred Single-Agent Regimens
- Anthracyclines: Doxorubicin, liposomal Doxorubicin
- Anti-metabolites: Capecitabine, Gemcitabine
- Fam-trastuzumab deruxtecan-nxki: For HER2 IHC 1+ or 2+/ISH-negative patients with history of ≥1 prior line of chemotherapy for metastatic disease and, if tumor is ER/PR-positive and are refractory to endocrine therapy
- Microtubule inhibitors: Vinorelbine, Eribulin
- Taxanes: Paclitaxel
- PARP inhibitor: Olaparib, Talazoparib
- Treatment option for HER2-negative, germline BRCA 1/2-mutation positive patients
- Platinum agents: Carboplatin, Cisplatin
- Treatment option for triple-negative, germline BRCA1/2-mutation positive patients
- Pembrolizumab plus albumin-bound Paclitaxel, Paclitaxel or Gemcitabine and Carboplatin: Treatment option for patients with PD-L1-positive triple-negative breast cancer
- Sacituzumab govitecan-hziy: For patients with triple-negative breast cancer who received ≥2 previous therapies with ≥1 line for metastatic disease or ER/PR-positive/HER2-negative breast cancer after previous treatment including endocrine therapy, a CDK4/6 inhibitor and ≥2 lines of chemotherapy including taxane for advanced breast cancer
Other Recommended Regimens
- Cyclophosphamide, Docetaxel, albumin-bound Paclitaxel, Epirubicin, Ixabepilone (for patients with triple-negative breast cancer with history of at least 2 therapies for metastatic breast cancer)
Useful in Certain Conditions (Eg High Tumor Burden, Rapidly Progressing Disease, Visceral Crisis)
- Doxorubicin, Cyclophosphamide (AC)
- Epirubicin, Cyclophosphamide (EC)
- Carboplatin and Paclitaxel or albumin-bound Paclitaxel
- Cyclophosphamide, Methotrexate, Fluorouracil (CMF)
- Docetaxel and Capecitabine
- Gemcitabine and Paclitaxel (GT)
- Gemcitabine and Carboplatin
HER2-Positive Disease
- May substitute Trastuzumab with Trastuzumab plus Hyaluronidase-oysk injection for subcutaneous use
- Combination of Trastuzumab and Pertuzumab with or without cytotoxic therapy may be considered in HER2-positive patients with recurrent or metastatic disease if without previous history of Pertuzumab treatment
- Pertuzumab, Trastuzumab, and Hyaluronidase-zzxf injection for subcutaneous use may be used as substitute agents in patients with history of treatment with IV Pertuzumab + Trastuzumab
Preferred Regimens
- First-line agents: Pertuzumab plus Trastuzumab plus Docetaxel, or Pertuzumab plus Trastuzumab plus Paclitaxel
- Second-line agent: Ado-trastuzumab emtansine (T-DM1), Fam-trastuzumab deruxtecan-nxki
Other Recommended Regimens
- Regimens used as third-line treatment option and beyond
- Tucatinib plus Trastuzumab plus Capecitabine: Treatment option for patients with advanced unresectable or metastatic disease, including brain metastases, with history of ≥1 line of HER2-targeted therapy
- Lapatinib plus Capecitabine: May be used in patients with HER2-positive tumors who are refractory to therapy with anthracycline, taxane and Trastuzumab
- Margetuximab-cmkb + chemotherapy (eg Capecitabine, Eribulin, Gemcitabine, Vinorelbine)
- Neratinib plus Capecitabine: May be used in patients with HER2-positive tumors who are refractory to therapy with anthracycline, taxane and Trastuzumab
- Trastuzumab plus Capecitabine
- Trastuzumab plus Docetaxel
- Trastuzumab plus Lapatinib (without cytotoxic therapy)
- Trastuzumab plus Paclitaxel with or without Carboplatin
- Trastuzumab plus Vinorelbine
- Trastuzumab plus other agents (eg mutation-specific agents [please see Systemic Therapy for Recurrent Unresectable or Metastatic Disease section])
Systemic Therapy for ER/PR-Positive Recurrent Unresectable or Metastatic Disease
HER2-Negative Postmenopausal Patients or Premenopausal Patients Receiving Ovarian Ablation/Suppression
Preferred Regimens - First-line Therapy
- Aromatase inhibitor plus CDK4/6 inhibitor (eg Abemaciclib, Palbociclib, Ribociclib)
- Estrogen receptor (ER) down-regulator (eg Fulvestrant) with or without non-steroidal aromatase inhibitor (eg Anastrozole, Letrozole)
- Fulvestrant plus CDK4/6 inhibitor (eg Abemaciclib, Palbociclib, Ribociclib)
Preferred Regimens - Second-line and Subsequent-line Therapy
- Everolimus plus endocrine therapy (eg Exemestane, Fulvestrant, Tamoxifen)
- Fulvestrant plus Alpelisib (for PIK3CA-mutated tumors)
- Fulvestrant plus CDK4/6 inhibitor (Abemaciclib, Palbociclib, Ribociclib) if not previously used
Other Recommended Regimens - First-line and/or Subsequent-line Therapy
- Selective ER down-regulator (eg Fulvestrant)
- Selective ER down-regulator (Fulvestrant) + non-steroidal aromatase inhibitor (Anastrozole, Letrozole)
- Non-steroidal aromatase inhibitors (eg Anastrozole, Letrozole)
- Selective ER modulators (eg Tamoxifen)
- Steroidal aromatase inactivator (eg Exemestane)
Conditional Regimens
- Abemaciclib
- Ethinyl estradiol
- Megestrol acetate
HER2-Positive Postmenopausal Patients or Premenopausal Patients Receiving Ovarian Ablation/Suppression
- Aromatase inhibitor with or without Trastuzumab
- Aromatase inhibitor with or without Lapatinib
- Aromatase inhibitor with or without Lapatinib plus Trastuzumab
- Fulvestrant with or without Trastuzumab
- Tamoxifen with or without Trastuzumab
HER2-Targeted Therapy
- Treatment option for ER/PR-positive, HER2-positive patients, should be offered once diagnosis is confirmed
- Includes any of the following:
- Pertuzumab plus Trastuzumab plus taxane (eg Docetaxel, Paclitaxel) (preferred regimen)
- Ado-trastuzumab emtansine (T-DM1)
- Capecitabine plus Trastuzumab or Lapatinib
- Fam-trastuzumab deruxtecan-nxki (preferred regimen)
- Trastuzumab plus chemotherapy (eg Carboplatin, Docetaxel, Paclitaxel, Vinorelbine, Lapatinib)
- Tucatinib with Trastuzumab and Capecitabine
- Neratinib plus Capecitabine
- Margetuximab-cmkb with chemotherapy
- Abemaciclib plus Trastuzumab and Fulvestrant
- Pertuzumab if not previously used
Aromatase Inhibitors
- Eg Anastrozole, Letrozole
- Used in postmenopausal patients
- Preferred first-line therapy for recurrent disease in postmenopausal women who have received previous antiestrogen therapy and are within 1 year of antiestrogen exposure
- Used in postmenopausal patients with ER- and/or PR-positive, HER2-negative or positive recurrent or stage IV breast cancer with no prior endocrine therapy within 1 year
Endocrine Therapy plus Ovarian Ablation or Suppression or Selective ER Modulators
- Tamoxifen is a standard
- Monotherapy with Tamoxifen may be considered in HER2-negative premenopausal women who declines ovarian ablation/suppression
- Used in premenopausal patients with ER- and/or PR-positive, HER2-negative or positive recurrent or stage IV breast cancer with or without prior endocrine therapy within 1 year
CDK4/6 Inhibitors
- Eg Abemaciclib, Palbociclib, Ribociclib
- Highly selective inhibitors of CDK4/6 kinase activity which are used to treat hormone receptor-positive, HER2-negative advanced or metastatic breast cancer
- Combination therapy of any CDK4/6 inhibitor with an aromatase inhibitor or Fulvestrant is a preferred first-line regimen option for hormone-receptor positive, HER2-negative postmenopausal patients or premenopausal patients receiving ovarian suppression or ablation with an LHRH agonist
- Abemaciclib or Palbociclib combined with Fulvestrant is among the preferred regimens for hormone receptor-positive, HER2-negative postmenopausal breast cancer patients
- Ribociclib with Tamoxifen may be considered as first-line treatment option, together with ovarian suppression, inpatients with hormone-receptor positive, HER2-negative metastatic breast cancer
- Abemaciclib may be considered in the presence of disease progression despite endocrine therapy and chemotherapy for metastatic disease
Mammalian Target of Rapamycin (mTOR) Pathway Inhibitor
- Inhibits protein in cells that promotes growth and division
- Eg Everolimus
- Used in addition to an aromatase inhibitor, Exemestane, Fulvestrant, or Tamoxifen in postmenopausal women with hormone receptor-positive, HER2-negative advanced breast cancer that had progressed or recurred during treatment with a non-steroidal aromatase inhibitor
- May also stop angiogenesis which can help limit tumor growth
Monoclonal Antibodies
Bevacizumab
- May be used to treat advanced or metastatic breast cancer which is commonly used in combination with Paclitaxel
- Prevents angiogenesis
Margetuximab
- Approved for use in patients with metastatic HER2-positive breast cancer previously given ≥2 anti-HER2 regimen, with at least 1 regimen for metastatic disease
Pembrolizumab
- Approved for use in patients with any subtype of breast cancer with unresectable or metastatic, microsatellite instability-high (MSI-H) or mismatch repair deficient (dMMR) solid tumors with disease progression after first-line therapy or when no alternative therapy options are available
Pertuzumab
- A HER dimerisation inhibitor preventing HER2 heterodimerisation with other HER receptors thereby inhibiting HER signalling pathway activation
- Used in combination with Trastuzumab, a taxane, chemotherapeutic agents and HER2-targeted therapy in the treatment of HER2-positive premenopausal or postmenopausal patients with recurrent or metastatic disease, regardless if with history of endocrine therapy in the past 12 months
- Also used for the treatment of locally advanced, inflammatory or early stage HER2-positive breast cancer
- Left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) assessment should be done at baseline and during treatment; discontinue if with confirmed clinically significant decline in LV function
Trastuzumab
- Indicated for high-risk, HER2-positive tumor
- Added in preoperative chemotherapy regimens in patients with HER2-positive tumors
- May be used to treat metastatic breast cancer, with or without chemotherapy
- May be given as monotherapy to patients with HER2-overexpressing tumors who have received at least 2 regimens of chemotherapy for metastatic disease
- May be used as adjuvant therapy along with chemotherapy in cancer recurrence risk reduction and as neoadjuvant therapy with chemotherapy to reduce the tumor size prior to surgical operation
- Combination with an anthracycline is related to significant cardiac toxicity, except as part of the neoadjuvant Trastuzumab with Paclitaxel followed by CEF regimen
- Ado-trastuzumab/Trastuzumab emtansine/T-DM1 is preferred over Trastuzumab for patients with disease progression after Trastuzumab-based treatment
- Subcutaneous Trastuzumab plus Hyaluronidase-oysk may be used in place of Trastuzumab
Mutation-specific Therapies
- PARP inhibitors Olaparib and Talazoparib are preferred options for patients with recurrent or metastatic breast cancer (any subtype) with BRCA1 and BRCA2 germline mutation, respectively
- Alpelisib + Fulvestrant combination therapy is recommended for patients with ER- and/or PR-positive, HER2-negative recurrent or stage IV breast cancer with PIK3CA activating mutation
- Atezolizumab + albumin-bound Paclitaxel combination therapy is recommended for ER- and/or PR-negative, HER2-negative recurrent or stage IV breast cancer with PD-L1 expression with ≥1% threshold for positivity on tumor-infiltrating immune cells
- Pembrolizumab + albumin-bound Paclitaxel, Paclitaxel or Gemcitabine and Carboplatin combination therapy are recommended for ER- and/or PR-negative, HER2-negative recurrent or stage IV breast cancer with PD-L1 expression with ≥1% threshold for positivity combined positive score of ≥10
- Pembrolizumab and Dostarlimab-gxly are indicated for patients with MSI-H/dMMR unresectable or metastatic tumors that have progressed on or following prior treatment and without satisfactory alternative treatment options
- For patients with unresectable or metastatic tumor mutational burden-high (TMB-H) (≥10 mutations/megabase [mut/Mb]) solid tumors that have progressed following prior treatment and without satisfactory alternative treatment options, Pembrolizumab may be considered
- Tropomyosin receptor kinase (TRK) inhibitors Larotrectinib and Entrectinib are recommended agents for patients with any subtype of breast cancer with neurotrophic tropomyosin receptor kinase (NTRK) gene fusions without a known acquired resistance mutation, no satisfactory alternative treatments or with disease progression following treatment
- Elacestrant is indicated for postmenopausal women with ER-positive, HER2-negative recurrent unresectable or stage IV breast cancer with ESR1 mutation after progression with 1 or 2 previous lines of endocrine therapy including 1 line containing a CDK4/6 inhibitor
- Selpercatinib is indicated for adult women with locally advanced or metastatic solid RET gene fusion-positive tumors with progression on or after previous systemic therapy or without satisfactory alternative therapy options
Selective ER Down-Regulator
- Eg Fulvestrant
- Recommended regimen for postmenopausal, HER2-negative patients with recurrent or metastatic breast cancer when given in combination with Palbociclib, Abemaciclib, or Everolimus
- May also be considered in postmenopausal, HER2-positive patients with recurrent or metastatic breast cancer
- Given with or without Trastuzumab
Selective ER Modulators
- Eg Tamoxifen
- Preferred regimen for postmenopausal, HER2-negative patients with recurrent or metastatic breast cancer
- Tamoxifen with or without Trastuzumab is an alternative option for postmenopausal, HER2-positive patients with recurrent or metastatic disease
Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors
- Eg Lapatinib, Neratinib
- Combined with an aromatase inhibitor, Capecitabine, or Trastuzumab as a treatment option for HER2-positive patients with recurrent or metastatic disease
- Combination of Lapatinib and Trastuzumab or Capecitabine may be considered in patients with disease progression after Trastuzumab-based therapy
- Neratinib/Capecitabine combination is an option for patients with ≥2 lines of prior HER2-targeted treatment
Other Agents
Bisphosphonates and Denosumab
- Given in addition to endocrine therapy or chemotherapy if bone metastasis is present
- May be considered in postmenopausal women receiving adjuvant aromatase inhibitor therapy
- Ibandronic acid, Pamidronate or Zoledronic acid (with calcium citrate and vitamin D)
- Help strengthen bones and decrease the risk of fractures and bone pains and prevent hypercalcemia of malignancy
- Zoledronic acid may be more effective than Pamidronic acid in lytic breast metastasis
- A randomized trial had shown Denosumab to have slightly better tolerability and efficacy when compared to Zoledronic acid