A phase II study of eribulin in Japanese patients with heavily pretreated metastatic breast cancer

K Aogi, H Iwata, N Masuda, H Mukai, M Yoshida, Y Rai, K Taguchi, Y Sasaki, S Takashima, K Aogi, H Iwata, N Masuda, H Mukai, M Yoshida, Y Rai, K Taguchi, Y Sasaki, S Takashima

Abstract

Background: Eribulin mesylate is a non-taxane microtubule dynamics inhibitor that recently gained Food and Drug Administration approval for late-line metastatic breast cancer (MBC).

Patients and methods: In this single-arm, multicentre open-label phase II trial Japanese patients pretreated with an anthracycline and a taxane received 1.4 mg/m(2) eribulin mesylate (2- to 5-min i.v. infusion on days 1 and 8 of a 21-day cycle). The primary efficacy end point was overall response rate (ORR) by independent review.

Results: Patients (N = 80) had received a median of three prior chemotherapy regimens (range 1-5). ORR was 21.3% [95% confidence interval (CI) 12.9-31.8; all partial responses (PRs)], stable disease (SD) occurred in 30 patients (37.5%) and the clinical benefit rate (complete response + PR + SD ≥6 months) was 27.5% (95% CI 18.1-38.6). Median duration of response was 3.9 months (95% CI 2.8-4.9), progression-free survival was 3.7 months (95% CI 2.0-4.4) and overall survival was 11.1 months (95% CI 7.9-15.8). The most frequent treatment-related grade 3/4 adverse events were neutropenia (95.1%), leukopenia (74.1%) and febrile neutropenia (13.6%). Grade 3 peripheral neuropathy occurred in 3.7% of patients (no grade 4).

Conclusions: Eribulin exhibited efficacy and tolerability in Japanese patients with heavily pretreated MBC.

Source: PubMed

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