Brain radiotherapy, tremelimumab-mediated CTLA-4-directed blockade +/− trastuzumab in patients with breast cancer brain metastases Journal Article


Authors: Page, D. B.; Beal, K.; Linch, S. N.; Spinelli, K. J.; Rodine, M.; Halpenny, D.; Modi, S.; Patil, S.; Young, R. J.; Kaley, T.; Merghoub, T.; Redmond, D.; Wong, P.; Barker, C. A.; Diab, A.; Norton, L.; McArthur, H. L.
Article Title: Brain radiotherapy, tremelimumab-mediated CTLA-4-directed blockade +/− trastuzumab in patients with breast cancer brain metastases
Abstract: Breast cancer brain metastases (BCBM) are a common and devastating complication of metastatic breast cancer with conventional systemic therapies demonstrating limited effectiveness. Consequently, radiotherapy (RT) ± surgery remains the cornerstone of BCBM management. Because preclinical and clinical evidence indicate that immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) may synergize with RT to promote systemic tumor regression, we explored the safety and efficacy of RT and concurrent tremelimumab-mediated cytotoxic T-lymphocyte associated protein 4 (CTLA-4) ICB with tremelimumab ± HER2-directed therapy with trastuzumab for BCBM. Eligible patients had BCBM indicated for brain RT. A Simon two-stage design was adopted to evaluate the efficacy of tremelimumab and RT in 20 patients with human epidermal growth factor receptor normal (HER2−) BCBM. The safety of concurrent RT, tremelimumab, and trastuzumab was evaluated in a cohort of 6 HER2+ patients. The primary endpoint was 12-week non-central nervous system (CNS) disease control rate (DCR). Secondary endpoints included safety, survival, and CNS response. Exploratory correlatives included characterization of peripheral blood immune responses among exceptional responders. Tremelimumab plus RT ± trastuzumab was tolerated with no treatment-related grade 4 adverse events reported. The 12-week non-CNS DCR was 10% (2/20) in the HER2− cohort and 33% (2/6) in the HER2+ cohort. One patient with HER2+ disease experienced a durable partial response with evidence of peripheral T-cell activation. Thus, tremelimumab and RT ± trastuzumab was tolerated. Although modest clinical activity was observed in the HER2- efficacy cohort, encouraging responses were observed in the HER2+ safety cohort. Consequently, a trial to determine efficacy in HER2+ BCBM is planned. Clinical Trial Registration Number: NCT02563925. © 2022, The Author(s).
Journal Title: npj Breast Cancer
Volume: 8
ISSN: 2374-4677
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group  
Date Published: 2022-04-19
Start Page: 50
Language: English
DOI: 10.1038/s41523-022-00404-2
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC9018738
PUBMED: 35440655
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 2 May 2022 -- Source: Scopus
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MSK Authors
  1. Sujata Patil
    511 Patil
  2. Larry Norton
    758 Norton
  3. Robert J Young
    230 Young
  4. Taha Merghoub
    364 Merghoub
  5. Kathryn Beal
    221 Beal
  6. Phillip Wong
    80 Wong
  7. Thomas Kaley
    154 Kaley
  8. Shanu Modi
    267 Modi
  9. Christopher Barker
    218 Barker
  10. Adi Diab
    26 Diab
  11. David B Page
    30 Page
  12. Micaela Ariel Henrich
    11 Henrich