Efficacy of Margetuximab vs Trastuzumab in Patients With Pretreated ERBB2-Positive Advanced Breast Cancer

Hope S. Rugo(University of California, San Francisco), Seock‐Ah Im(Seoul National University Hospital), Fátima Cardoso(Champalimaud Foundation), Javier Cortés(Hospital Quirónsalud Barcelona), Giuseppe Curigliano(University of Milan), Antonino Musolino(University of Parma), Mark D. Pegram(Stanford University), Gail S. Wright(Florida Cancer Specialists & Research Institute), Cristina Saura(Vall d'Hebron Hospital Universitari), Santiago Escrivá-de-Romaní(Vall d'Hebron Hospital Universitari), Michelino De Laurentiis(Istituto Nazionale Tumori IRCCS "Fondazione G. Pascale"), Christelle Lévy(Centre François Baclesse), Ursa Brown‐Glaberman(University of New Mexico), Jean-­Marc Ferrero(Centre Antoine Lacassagne), Maaike de Boer(Maastricht University), Sung‐Bae Kim(Asan Medical Center), Katarína Petráková(Masaryk Memorial Cancer Institute), Denise A. Yardley(Sarah Cannon), Orit Freedman(Lakeridge Health), Erik Jakobsen(Vejle Sygehus), Bella Kaufman(Sheba Medical Center), Rinat Yerushalmi(Rabin Medical Center), Peter A. Fasching(Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg), Jeffrey L. Nordstrom(MacroGenics (United States)), Ezio Bonvini(MacroGenics (United States)), Scott Koenig(MacroGenics (United States)), Sutton Edlich(MacroGenics (United States)), Shengyan Hong(MacroGenics (United States)), Edwin P. Rock(MacroGenics (United States)), William J. Gradishar(Northwestern University), SOPHIA Study Group
JAMA Oncology
January 23, 2021
Cited by 348Open Access
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Abstract

IMPORTANCE: ERRB2 (formerly HER2)-positive advanced breast cancer (ABC) remains typically incurable with optimal treatment undefined in later lines of therapy. The chimeric antibody margetuximab shares ERBB2 specificity with trastuzumab but incorporates an engineered Fc region to increase immune activation. OBJECTIVE: To compare the clinical efficacy of margetuximab vs trastuzumab, each with chemotherapy, in patients with pretreated ERBB2-positive ABC. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: The SOPHIA phase 3 randomized open-label trial of margetuximab plus chemotherapy vs trastuzumab plus chemotherapy enrolled 536 patients from August 26, 2015, to October 10, 2018, at 166 sites in 17 countries. Eligible patients had disease progression on 2 or more prior anti-ERBB2 therapies and 1 to 3 lines of therapy for metastatic disease. Data were analyzed from February 2019 to October 2019. INTERVENTIONS: Investigators selected chemotherapy before 1:1 randomization to margetuximab, 15 mg/kg, or trastuzumab, 6 mg/kg (loading dose, 8 mg/kg), each in 3-week cycles. Stratification factors were metastatic sites (≤2, >2), lines of therapy (≤2, >2), and chemotherapy choice. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Sequential primary end points were progression-free survival (PFS) by central blinded analysis and overall survival (OS). All α was allocated to PFS, followed by OS. Secondary end points were investigator-assessed PFS and objective response rate by central blinded analysis. RESULTS: A total of 536 patients were randomized to receive margetuximab (n = 266) or trastuzumab (n = 270). The median age was 56 (27-86) years; 266 (100%) women were in the margetuximab group, while 267 (98.9%) women were in the trastuzumab group. Groups were balanced. All but 1 patient had received prior pertuzumab, and 489 (91.2%) had received prior ado-trastuzumab emtansine. Margetuximab improved primary PFS over trastuzumab with 24% relative risk reduction (hazard ratio [HR], 0.76; 95% CI, 0.59-0.98; P = .03; median, 5.8 [95% CI, 5.5-7.0] months vs 4.9 [95% CI, 4.2-5.6] months; October 10, 2018). After the second planned interim analysis of 270 deaths, median OS was 21.6 months with margetuximab vs 19.8 months with trastuzumab (HR, 0.89; 95% CI, 0.69-1.13; P = .33; September 10, 2019), and investigator-assessed PFS showed 29% relative risk reduction favoring margetuximab (HR, 0.71; 95% CI, 0.58-0.86; P < .001; median, 5.7 vs 4.4 months; September 10, 2019). Margetuximab improved objective response rate over trastuzumab: 22% vs 16% (P = .06; October 10, 2018), and 25% vs 14% (P < .001; September 10, 2019). Incidence of infusion-related reactions, mostly in cycle 1, was higher with margetuximab (35 [13.3%] vs 9 [3.4%]); otherwise, safety was comparable. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: In this phase 3 randomized clinical trial, margetuximab plus chemotherapy had acceptable safety and a statistically significant improvement in PFS compared with trastuzumab plus chemotherapy in ERBB2-positive ABC after progression on 2 or more prior anti-ERBB2 therapies. Final OS analysis is expected in 2021. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02492711.


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