Metastatic Breast Cancer Clinical Trial
Official title:
Randomized Phase III Study of Fulvestrant as Maintenance Therapy After First-line Chemotherapy in HER2 Negative Postmenopausal Metastatic Breast Cancer Patients
Breast cancer is one of the most prevalent cancers among women, and represents 20 - 25% of
all female cancers. Despite earlier diagnosis and improvement in adjuvant therapies, some
patients will present metastatic recurrence.
Treatment of breast cancer is determined by the extent of the disease. Early or localized
breast cancer is treated by a combination of surgery and radiotherapy. Adjuvant systemic
therapy, consisting of chemotherapy and/or endocrine therapy, in tumors deemed hormone
responsive, can prolong the disease-free interval and improve overall survival. However,
approximately 30% to 40% of patients with early breast cancer will ultimately relapse, with
either local recurrence or distant metastases, and require further systemic treatment for
advanced disease.
Since breast cancer that recurs or progresses after initial treatment is considered
incurable, the therapy options available for advanced disease are concerned with disease
control and palliation of symptoms.
Hormonal therapy has become the treatment of choice in postmenopausal women with hormone
sensitive breast cancer. Even though the treatment of advanced breast cancer in
postmenopausal women has improved with the introduction of agents such as aromatase
inhibitors, these agents still have limitations, and disease management continues to be
sub-optimal. The use of systemic therapies such as hormonal therapy, chemotherapy or new
biological treatment is to reduce tumour masses, improve survival and preserve quality of
life. Whatever the initial efficacy of the treatment undertaken in metastatic setting,
almost every patient will relapse. The main goal is to improve progression free survival
(PFS). To achieve this, the type of chemotherapy, the optimal duration of chemotherapy, the
benefit of maintenance chemotherapy, the benefit of maintenance hormonal treatment are
debatable.
The search for prognostic and predictive factors that could influence the survival of
patients treated for metastatic breast cancer has already been the subject of several
studies. It seems that 2 components in the natural outcome of tumors must be considered. The
first category is related to the primary characteristics such as initial histological grade,
hormonal receptor status. The second category is linked to the metastatic characteristics:
proliferation index reflected by the length of disease-free interval, type and number of
metastatic sites involved. On the other hand, some prognostic factors are linked to the
treatments undertaken, stressing their impact on the natural outcome of the disease: type of
hormonotherapy, type of chemotherapy, type of response achieved by treatment.
The impact of some factors remains debatable, such the duration of treatment. The optimal
duration of chemotherapy in patients who respond or have stable disease is not identified.
Definitively, the major limit to the use of prolonged regimens of chemotherapy is related to
their toxicity, all the more so as they are cumulative (cardiac toxicity of anthracyclins,
neurologic toxicity of taxanes, haematological cumulative toxicities with any
chemotherapy…). The proposition to give hormonal treatment to prolong therapy in
hormonal-positive tumors is another possible option. In the literature, data focused on this
strategy are rare.
One can object that the choice of patient/tumor characteristics for who would or would not
receive the maintenance hormonal therapy was not random, or controlled in any way. This may
have led to a selection of better prognosis patients. Investigators cannot know whether they
are observing natural history or impacting it in such a trial. Nevertheless the major impact
obtained by maintenance hormonal treatment after the first line chemotherapy might indicate
that this strategy should be recommended in patients with an ER or PgR positive tumor. Based
on the amplitude of the benefit observed, it may be ethically debatable to conduct a
prospective randomized study. Moreover, randomized trials which assess the benefit of a new
chemotherapy regimen should allow the possibility to give maintenance hormonal treatment.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Diagnostic
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