87 Elacestrant Plus Abemaciclib Combination in Patients With Estrogen Receptor-positive, HER2-Negative Advanced or Metastatic Breast Cancer

Publication
Article
Miami Breast Cancer Conference® Abstracts Supplement42nd Annual Miami Breast Cancer Conference® - Abstracts
Volume 39
Issue 4
Pages: 36-37

87 Elacestrant Plus Abemaciclib Combination in Patients With Estrogen Receptor-positive, HER2-Negative Advanced or Metastatic Breast Cancer

87 Elacestrant Plus Abemaciclib Combination in Patients With Estrogen Receptor-positive, HER2-Negative Advanced or Metastatic Breast Cancer

Background

After first-line endocrine therapy (ET) plus CDK4/6 inhibitor (CDK4.6i) in estrogen receptor–positive/HER2-negative (ER+/HER2–) metastatic breast cancer, tumors develop resistance to intrinsic alterations in the cell cycle or PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathways or to acquired ESR1 mutation that emerges in up to 50% of patients. In the phase 3 EMERALD trial (NCT03778931), elacestrant significantly prolonged progression-free survival (PFS) vs standard-of-care (SOC) ET with manageable safety in patients with ER+/HER2– metastatic breast cancer previously treated with ET plus CDK4/6i (ESR1-mutated tumors: HR, 0.55; 95% CI, 0.39-0.77; P = .0005; all patients: HR, 0.70; 95% CI, 0.55-0.88; P = .0018). In patients with ESR1-mutated tumors that received prior ET plus CDK4/6i at 12 months or more, the median PFS with elacestrant was 8.6 months vs 1.9 months with SOC ET. The rationale for combining elacestrant plus abemaciclib is to overcome different resistance mechanisms and enable an all-oral treatment option. Elacestrant plus abemaciclib is being evaluated in the phase 1b/2 ELECTRA (NCT05386108) and ELEVATE (NCT05563220) trials. This pooled analysis reports updated safety and preliminary efficacy in patients with prior ET+CDK4/6i exposure (excluding abemaciclib).

Materials and Methods

Eligible patients must have received prior ET for metastatic breast cancer, including 1 or more lines of ET, with or without CDK4/6i (excluding abemaciclib), or chemotherapy (ELECTRA only). Safety was evaluated in all patients who received elacestrant plus abemaciclib. The efficacy evaluable population includes patients from ELECTRA phase 1b.

Results

As of October 15, 2024, 57 patients received elacestrant plus abemaciclib. In 42 patients who received the recommended phase 2 dose (RP2D; elacestrant at 345 mg once daily plus abemaciclib at 150 mg twice daily), the majority had 1 to 2 lines of prior ET (97%), prior CDK4/6i (100%), prior chemotherapy (16%) and visceral metastases (71%). At the RP2D, the most common all-grade adverse effects (AEs; ≥20%) were diarrhea (n = 35, 83%; 5% grade 3), nausea (n = 27, 64%; 5% grade 3), vomiting (n = 17, 41%; 2% grade 3), fatigue (n = 15, 36%; 5% grade 3), neutropenia (n = 14, 33%; 26% grade 3), anemia (n = 10, 24%; 7% grade 3), constipation (n = 9, 21%; 0% grade 3) and decreased appetite (n = 9, 21%; 0% grade 3). No grade 4 AEs were observed. In efficacy-evaluable patients from ELECTRA phase 1b, median PFS was 8.7 months in all patients (n = 27), 8.7 months in patients with prior ET in metastatic breast cancer (n = 24), 8.7 months in ESR1-mutated tumors (n = 11), 7.2 months in ESR1 mutation not detected (n = 12). Median PFS by dose level was 8.7 months (elacestrant 345 mg daily + abemaciclib 150 mg twice daily, n = 12), 7.5 months (elacestrant at 345 mg daily plus abemaciclib 100 mg twice daily, n = 7), and 8.4 months (elacestrant 258 mg daily plus abemaciclib 100 mg twice daily, n = 8).

Conclusion

The safety of elacestrant plus abemaciclib was consistent with the known profile of abemaciclib plus standard ET. Elacestrant plus abemaciclib showed clinically important efficacy regardless of ESR1-mutation status. Elacestrant has the potential to become the ET backbone to enable an all-oral treatment option, delay chemotherapy or antibody-drug conjugate–based regimens. Phase 2 is ongoing.

Articles in this issue

2 Preventive Care and Screening Adherence Among Women Surviving Breast Cancer
2 Preventive Care and Screening Adherence Among Women Surviving Breast Cancer
3 Intraoperative Radiotherapy: Alive and Well in the Bronx
3 Intraoperative Radiotherapy: Alive and Well in the Bronx
4 Evaluating AI-Driven Responses in Breast Reconstruction: A Comparative Study of Response Formats
4 Evaluating AI-Driven Responses in Breast Reconstruction: A Comparative Study of Response Formats
5 Correlation Between Visual Impairment and Breast Cancer: A Cross-Sectional Study Based on the National Health Interview Surveys
5 Correlation Between Visual Impairment and Breast Cancer: A Cross-Sectional Study Based on the National Health Interview Surveys
6 Peer Support Programming Among Women At-Risk for Surviving Breast Cancer: Facilitators and Barriers to Community-Based Patient Navigation and the Role of Quality of Life
6 Peer Support Programming Among Women At-Risk for Surviving Breast Cancer: Facilitators and Barriers to Community-Based Patient Navigation and the Role of Quality of Life
7 Metaplastic Breast Cancer: A Retrospective Chart Review of Clinical Features
7 Metaplastic Breast Cancer: A Retrospective Chart Review of Clinical Features
8 A Case Series Exploring Characteristics and Outcomes of Metachronous Primary Breast and Lung Cancer in a Diverse Cohort
8 A Case Series Exploring Characteristics and Outcomes of Metachronous Primary Breast and Lung Cancer in a Diverse Cohort
9 Body Mass Index, Cancer Risk Behaviors, and Readiness for Dietary Change Among Women Surviving With Breast Cancer
9 Body Mass Index, Cancer Risk Behaviors, and Readiness for Dietary Change Among Women Surviving With Breast Cancer
10 AI as a Bridge: Can ChatGPT Help Patients Understand Their Breast Radiology Reports?
10 AI as a Bridge: Can ChatGPT Help Patients Understand Their Breast Radiology Reports?
12 Gut Microbiome Composition and Pathological Complete Response After Chemotherapy in Breast Cancer: Insights From a Pilot Study
12 Gut Microbiome Composition and Pathological Complete Response After Chemotherapy in Breast Cancer: Insights From a Pilot Study
13 Preliminary Analysis of Change During Treatment of Financial Toxicity and Quality of Life in Breast Cancer Patients
13 Preliminary Analysis of Change During Treatment of Financial Toxicity and Quality of Life in Breast Cancer Patients
15 Utilizing Circulating Tumor Cells to Guide HER2-Directed Therapy in IHC/FISH-Negative HER2+ Metastatic Breast Cancer
15 Utilizing Circulating Tumor Cells to Guide HER2-Directed Therapy in IHC/FISH-Negative HER2+ Metastatic Breast Cancer
16 A Miami Hospital’s Infrastructure to Help Decrease Late-Stage Breast Cancer Diagnosis and Improve Health Equity
16 A Miami Hospital’s Infrastructure to Help Decrease Late-Stage Breast Cancer Diagnosis and Improve Health Equity
17 Salmonella and the Breast: A Literature Review of Salmonella-Induced Breast Abscesses
17 Salmonella and the Breast: A Literature Review of Salmonella-Induced Breast Abscesses
18 Tolerability of First-Line Treatment With Ribociclib for Metastatic Breast Cancer Using 2 Large US Data Sources
18 Tolerability of First-Line Treatment With Ribociclib for Metastatic Breast Cancer Using 2 Large US Data Sources
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