Circulating tumor DNA-guided treatment with pertuzumab plus trastuzumab for HER2-amplified metastatic colorectal cancer: a phase 2 trial

Yoshiaki Nakamura(National Cancer Center Hospital East), Wataru Okamoto(Hiroshima University Hospital), Takeshi Kato(Osaka National Hospital), Taito Esaki(National Hospital Organization Kyushu Cancer Center), Ken Kato(National Cancer Center Hospital East), Yoshito Komatsu(Hokkaido University Hospital), Satoshi Yuki(Hokkaido University Hospital), Toshiki Masuishi(Aichi Cancer Center), Tomohiro Nishina(Shikoku Cancer Center), Hiromichi Ebi(Aichi Cancer Center), Kentaro Sawada(Kushiro Rosai Hospital), Hiroya Taniguchi(Aichi Cancer Center), Nozomu Fuse(National Cancer Center Hospital East), Shogo Nomura(National Cancer Center Hospital East), Makoto Fukui(National Cancer Center Hospital East), Seiko Matsuda(National Cancer Center Hospital East), Yasutoshi Sakamoto(National Cancer Center Hospital East), Hiroshi Uchigata(National Cancer Center Hospital East), Kana Kitajima(National Cancer Center Hospital East), Naomi Kuramoto(National Cancer Center Hospital East), T. Asakawa, Steve Olsen(Guardant (United States)), Justin I. Odegaard(Guardant (United States)), Akihiro Sato(National Cancer Center Hospital East), Satoshi Fujii(National Cancer Center Hospital East), Atsushi Ohtsu(National Cancer Center Hospital East), Takayuki Yoshino(National Cancer Center Hospital East)
Nature Medicine
November 1, 2021
Cited by 242Open Access
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Abstract

The applicability of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) genotyping to inform enrollment of patients with cancer in clinical trials has not been established. We conducted a phase 2 trial to evaluate the efficacy of pertuzumab plus trastuzumab for metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC), with human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) amplification prospectively confirmed by tumor tissue or ctDNA analysis ( UMIN000027887 ). HER2 amplification was confirmed in tissue and/or ctDNA in 30 patients with mCRC. The study met the primary endpoint with a confirmed objective response rate of 30% in 27 tissue-positive patients and 28% in 25 ctDNA-positive patients, as compared to an objective response rate of 0% in a matched real-world reference population treated with standard-of-care salvage therapy. Post hoc exploratory analyses revealed that baseline ctDNA genotyping of HER2 copy number and concurrent oncogenic alterations adjusted for tumor fraction stratified patients according to efficacy with similar accuracy to tissue genotyping. Decreased ctDNA fraction 3 weeks after treatment initiation associated with therapeutic response. Pertuzumab plus trastuzumab showed similar efficacy in patients with mCRC with HER2 amplification in tissue or ctDNA, showing that ctDNA genotyping can identify patients who benefit from dual-HER2 blockade as well as monitor treatment response. These findings warrant further use of ctDNA genotyping in clinical trials for HER2-amplified mCRC, which might especially benefit patients in first-line treatment.


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