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Article Abstract

Purpose: The activating mutation occurs in approximately 7% of estrogen receptor-positive (ER) metastatic breast cancer (MBC). We report, from a multipart, first-in-human, phase I study (NCT01226316), tolerability and activity of capivasertib, an oral AKT inhibitor, as monotherapy or combined with fulvestrant in expansion cohorts of patients with -mutant ER MBC.

Patients And Methods: Patients with an mutation, detected by local (next-generation sequencing) or central (plasma-based BEAMing) testing, received capivasertib 480 mg twice daily, 4 days on, 3 days off, weekly or 400 mg twice daily combined with fulvestrant at the labeled dose. Study endpoints included safety, objective response rate (ORR; RECIST v1.1), progression-free survival (PFS), and clinical benefit rate at 24 weeks (CBR). Biomarker analyses were conducted in the combination cohort.

Results: From October 2013 to August 2018, 63 heavily pretreated patients received capivasertib (20 monotherapy, 43 combination). ORR was 20% with monotherapy, and within the combination cohort was 36% in fulvestrant-pretreated and 20% in fulvestrant-naïve patients, although the latter group may have had more aggressive disease at baseline. mutations were detectable in plasma by BEAMing (95%, 41/43), droplet digital PCR (80%, 33/41), and next-generation sequencing (76%, 31/41). A ≥50% decrease in at cycle 2 day 1 was associated with improved PFS. Combination therapy appeared more tolerable than monotherapy [most frequent grade ≥3 adverse events: rash (9% vs. 20%), hyperglycemia (5% vs. 30%), diarrhea (5% vs. 10%)].

Conclusions: Capivasertib demonstrated clinically meaningful activity in heavily pretreated patients with -mutant ER MBC, including those with prior disease progression on fulvestrant. Tolerability and activity appeared improved by the combination.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7415507PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-19-3953DOI Listing

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