Estimating the magnitude of trastuzumab effects within patient subgroups in the HERA trial.

Journal: Annals Of Oncology : Official Journal Of The European Society For Medical Oncology
Published:
Abstract

Background: Trastuzumab (Herceptin(R)) improves disease-free survival (DFS) and overall survival for patients with human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)-positive early breast cancer. We aimed to assess the magnitude of its clinical benefit for subpopulations defined by nodal and steroid hormone receptor status using data from the Herceptin Adjuvant (HERA) study.

Methods: HERA is an international multicenter randomized trial comparing 1 or 2 years of trastuzumab treatment with observation after standard chemotherapy in women with HER2-positive breast cancer. In total, 1703 women randomized to 1-year trastuzumab and 1698 women randomized to observation were included in these analyses. Median follow-up was 23.5 months. The primary endpoint was DFS.

Results: The overall hazard ratio (HR) for trastuzumab versus observation was 0.64 [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.54-0.76; P < 0.0001], ranging from 0.46 to 0.82 for subgroups. Estimated improvement in 3-year DFS in subgroups ranged from +11.3% to +0.6%. Patients with the best prognosis (those with node-negative disease and tumors 1.1-2.0 cm) had benefit similar to the overall cohort (HR 0.53, 95% CI 0.26-1.07; 3-year DFS improvement +4.6%, 95% CI -4.0% to 13.2%).

Conclusions: Adjuvant trastuzumab therapy reduces the risk of relapse similarly across subgroups defined by nodal status and steroid hormone receptor status, even those at relatively low risk for relapse.

Authors
M Untch, R Gelber, C Jackisch, M Procter, J Baselga, R Bell, D Cameron, M Bari, I Smith, B Leyland Jones, E De Azambuja, P Wermuth, R Khasanov, F Feng Yi, C Constantin, J Mayordomo, C-h Su, S-y Yu, A Lluch, E Senkus Konefka, C Price, F Haslbauer, T Suarez Sahui, V Srimuninnimit, M Colleoni, A Coates, M Piccart Gebhart, A Goldhirsch
Relevant Conditions

Breast Cancer