Targeting BRCA Deficiency in Breast Cancer: What are the Clinical Evidences and the Next Perspectives?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. BRCA1/2-Associated Breast Cancer and Cytotoxic Chemotherapy
2.1. Response and Outcome in Advanced Breast Cancer Receiving Chemotherapy According to BRCA Status
2.2. Pattern of Response to Cytotoxic Chemotherapy in BRCA1/2-Associated Breast Cancer
2.2.1. Anthracyclines
2.2.2. Taxanes
2.2.3. Platinum Agents
2.2.4. Alkylating Agents
3. BRCA1/2-Associated Breast Cancer and PARP Inhibitors
3.1. PARP Inhibitors and Synthetic Lethality
3.2. Olaparib
3.3. Talazoparib
3.4. Veliparib
3.5. Other PARPi
3.6. Mechanims of Resistance to PARPi
3.7. Innovative Association with PARPi
3.7.1. Association with Chemotherapy
3.7.2. Association with radiation therapy
3.7.3. Association with Other Targeted Therapies
3.7.4. Association with Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors
4. Extending the Patient Population Candidate to DNA-Damaging Agents: The BRCAness Concept
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Trial | Phase | Patients | Dose and Schedule | Response |
---|---|---|---|---|
Neoadjuvant Setting | ||||
Byrsky 2010 [29] | Retrospective | gBRCA1m (n = 102) including 12 pts treated with cisplatin | - | pCR = 83% (10/12) |
Byrsky 2011 [38] | Retrospective | gBRCA1m (n = 28) | Cisplatin 75 mg/m2 every 3 weeks 4 cycles | pCR = 60.5% (23/28) |
Byrsky 2014 [39] | Retrospective | gBRCA1m (n = 107) | Cisplatin 75 mg/m2 every 3 weeks 4 cycles | pCR = 61% (65/107) |
Silver 2010 [40] | Retrospective | TNBC (n = 28) including 2 pts with gBRCA-1m | Cisplatin 75 mg/m2 every 3 weeks 4 cycles | pCR = 22% (6/28) including 100% (2/2) in pts with gBRCA-1m |
Hahnen 2017 [41] | Phase II | TNBC (n = 146) including 50 pts with gBRCAm | Carboplatin AUC 1.5 or AUC 2 every week 18 weeks following standard CT | pCR = 56.8% (83/146) |
Metastatic Setting | ||||
Byrsky 2012 [42] | Phase II | gBRCA1m (n = 20) | Cisplatin 75 mg/m2 every 3 weeks 6 cycles | ORR = 80% (9 CR; 7 PR) mPFS = 12 month |
Isakoff 2015 [43] | Phase II | TNBC or BRCA associated BC (n = 83) including 11 pts with gBRCAm | Cisplatin 75 mg/m2 or Carboplatin AUC6 every 3 weeks | ORR = 54.5% in pts with gBRCA1/2-m |
Tutt 2018 [44] | Phase III | TNBC or BRCA associated BC (n = 376) including 43 pts with gBRCAm | Carboplatin AUC 6 vs. Docetaxel 100 mg/m2 every 3 weeks 6 cycles | ORR = 68%vs 33.3% in pts with gBRCAm, PFS = 6.8 mo vs. 4.8 (p = 0.002) in pts with gBRCAm |
Trial | Phase | Patients | Dose and Schedule | Response in Breast Cancer |
---|---|---|---|---|
Olaparib | ||||
Fong 2009 [63] | I | Solid advanced tumors (n = 60) including 9 MBC with 3 gBRCAm carriers | Olaparib 10 mg to 600 mg BID 2/3 weeks | 1 CR; 1 SD; 1 PR |
Tutt 2010 [64] | II | gBRCAm associated BC (n = 27) | Olaparib 400 mg BID (first cohort) Olaparib 100 mg BID (second cohort) | ORR = 41% (first cohort) ORR = 22% (second cohort) |
Gelmon 2011 [65] | II | Solid advanced cancer (n = 91) including 26 advanced TNBC; 10 with gBRCAm | Olaparib 400 mg BID | PFS = 3.6 mo vs. 1.8 |
Kaufman 2015 [66] | II | gBRCAm associated tumors (n = 298) including 62 BC | Olaparib 400 mg BID | ORR = 12.6% |
Robson 2017 [67] | III | gBRCAm associated BC (n = 302) olaparib (n = 205) vs. SOC (n = 97) | Olaparib 300 mg BID vs. SOC | ORR = 59.9% vs. 28.8% PFS = 7.0 mo vs. 4.2 |
Olaparib + CT | ||||
Balmana 2014 [68] | I | Solid advanced tumors (n = 59) including 42 BC | Olaparib 50–200 mg BID Cisplatin 75 mg/m2 | ORR = 71% (gBCRA population) |
Lee 2014 [69] | I/Ib | Solid advanced tumors (n = 45) including 8 BC | Olaparib 100–400 mg BID Carboplatin AUC5 | ORR = 87.5% (gBRCA1 population) |
Talazoparib | ||||
De Bono 2017 [70] | I | Solid advanced tumors (n = 110) including 14 BC treated with talazoparib | Talazoparib 0.025 mg to 1 mg daily | ORR = 50% with 1 CR |
Turner 2017 [71] | II | gBRCAm associated BC (n = 84) cohort 1: 49 pts cohort 2: 35 pts | Talazoparib 1 mg daily | ORR = 21% (cohort 1) ORR = 37% (cohort 2) |
Litton 2018 (EMBRACA) [72] | III | gBRCAm associated BC (n = 431) talazoparib (n = 247) vs. SOC (n = 144) | Talazoparib 1 mg daily vs. SOC | ORR = 62.6% vs. 27.2% PFS = 8.6 mo vs. 5.6 |
Veliparib + CT | ||||
Rugo 2016 (I SPY) [73] | II | Stage II/III BC 72 pts assigned to veliparib-carboplatin including 17 gBRCAm | Veliparib 50 mg BID associated to carboplatin vs. SOC | pCR = 51% vs. 26% |
Loibl 2016 (Brightness) [74] | II | Stage II/III BC 634 pts with TNBC including 92 gBRCAm | Veliparib 50 mg BID or placebo associated to SOC | pCR = 51% in gBRCAm treated with veliparib |
Han 2018 [75] | II | gBRCAm associated BC (n = 284) | Veliparib 120 mg daily or placebo associated with carboplatin/paclitaxel or temozolomide | Veliparib/temozolomide ORR = 26%; PFS = 7.4 mo |
Veliparib/carboplatin/taxol ORR = 77.8% vs. 61.3% PFS = 14.1 mo vs. 12.3 | ||||
Rucaparib | ||||
Drew 2016 [76] | II | Solid advanced tumors (n = 78) including 27 BC | Rucaparib IV and PO 92 mg to 600 BID | SD = 44% (8/18 BC) in the IV cohort SD = 20% (1/5 BC) in the PO cohort |
Rucaparib + CT | ||||
Wilson 2017 [77] | I | Solid advanced tumors (n = 85) including 22 BC with 7 gBRCAm carriers | Rucaparib IV 12–24 mg then PO 80–360 mg Chemotherapy | 1 CR and 1 PR in gBRCAm population |
Miller 2015 [78] | II | Residual tumor post neoadjuvant CT (n = 128) gBRCAm or TNBC | Rucaparib 25–30 mg IV days 1 to 3 (4 cycles) then rucaparib PO 100 mg weekly Cisplatin 75 mg/m2 | 2 yr DFS = 58.3% (cisplatin alone) vs. 63.1% (cisplatin/rucaparib) |
Niraparib | ||||
Sandhu 2013 [79] | I | Solid advanced tumors (n = 100) including 22 BC | Niraparib 30–400mg daily | 2 PR in the gBRCAm population |
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Nicolas, E.; Bertucci, F.; Sabatier, R.; Gonçalves, A. Targeting BRCA Deficiency in Breast Cancer: What are the Clinical Evidences and the Next Perspectives? Cancers 2018, 10, 506. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers10120506
Nicolas E, Bertucci F, Sabatier R, Gonçalves A. Targeting BRCA Deficiency in Breast Cancer: What are the Clinical Evidences and the Next Perspectives? Cancers. 2018; 10(12):506. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers10120506
Chicago/Turabian StyleNicolas, Emanuel, François Bertucci, Renaud Sabatier, and Anthony Gonçalves. 2018. "Targeting BRCA Deficiency in Breast Cancer: What are the Clinical Evidences and the Next Perspectives?" Cancers 10, no. 12: 506. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers10120506
APA StyleNicolas, E., Bertucci, F., Sabatier, R., & Gonçalves, A. (2018). Targeting BRCA Deficiency in Breast Cancer: What are the Clinical Evidences and the Next Perspectives? Cancers, 10(12), 506. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers10120506