A randomized phase II trial of ridaforolimus, dalotuzumab, and exemestane compared with ridaforolimus and exemestane in patients with advanced breast cancer

Hope S. Rugo, Olivier Trédan, Jungsil Ro, Serafin M. Morales, Mario Campone, Antonino Musolino, Noémia Afonso, Marta Ferreira, Kyong Hwa Park, Javier Cortes, Antoinette R. Tan, Joanne L. Blum, Lamar Eaton, Christine K. Gause, Zhen Wang, Ellie Im, David J. Mauro, Mary Beth Jones, Andrew Denker, José Baselga

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    21 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Purpose: To evaluate whether adding humanized monoclonal insulin growth factor-1 receptor (IGF-1R) antibody (dalotuzumab) to mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) inhibitor (ridaforolimus) plus aromatase inhibitor (exemestane) improves outcomes in patients with estrogen receptor (ER)-positive advanced/metastatic breast cancer. Methods: This randomized, open-label, phase II trial enrolled 80 postmenopausal women with high-proliferation (Ki67 index staining ≥15%), ER-positive breast cancer that progressed after a non-steroidal aromatase inhibitor (NCT01605396). Randomly assigned patients were given oral ridaforolimus 10 mg QD 5 ×/week, intravenous dalotuzumab 10 mg/kg/week, and oral exemestane 25 mg/day (R/D/E, n = 40), or ridaforolimus 30 mg QD 5 ×/week and exemestane 25 mg/day (R/E; n = 40). Primary end point was progression-free survival (PFS). Results: Median PFS was 23.3 weeks for R/D/E versus 31.9 weeks for R/E (hazard ratio 1.18; 80% CI 0.81–1.72; P = 0.565). Grade 3–5 adverse events were reported in 67.5% of patients in the R/E arm and 59.0% in the R/D/E arm. Stomatitis (95.0 vs. 76.9%; P = 0.021) and pneumonitis (22.5 vs. 5.1%; P = 0.027) occurred more frequently in the R/E than the R/D/E arm; hyperglycemia (27.5 vs. 28.2%) occurred at a similar rate. Conclusions: R/D/E did not improve PFS compared with R/E. Because the PFS reported for R/E was similar to that reported for everolimus plus exemestane in patients with advanced breast cancer, it is possible that lower-dose ridaforolimus in the R/D/E arm (from overlapping toxicities with IGF1R inhibitor) contributed to lack of improved PFS.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)601-609
    Number of pages9
    JournalBreast Cancer Research and Treatment
    Volume165
    Issue number3
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2017 Oct 1

    Bibliographical note

    Publisher Copyright:
    © 2017, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC.

    Keywords

    • Breast cancer
    • Dalotuzumab
    • Exemestane
    • IGF1R
    • Ridaforolimus
    • mTOR

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Oncology
    • Cancer Research

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