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FDA expands early breast cancer indication for abemaciclib with endocrine therapy

6 Mar 2023
FDA expands early breast cancer indication for abemaciclib with endocrine therapy

On March 3, 2023, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved abemaciclib with endocrine therapy (tamoxifen or an aromatase inhibitor) for the adjuvant treatment of adult patients with hormone receptor (HR)-positive, human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)-negative, node-positive, early breast cancer at high risk of recurrence.

Patients defined as high risk included those having either ≥4 pALN (pathologic axillary lymph nodes) or 1-3 pALN and either tumour grade 3 or a tumour size ≥50 mm.

Abemaciclib was previously approved for the above high-risk population with the additional requirement of having a Ki-67 score ≥20%. Today’s approval removes the Ki-67 testing requirement.

Efficacy was evaluated in monarchE (NCT03155997), a randomized (1:1), open-label, two-cohort multicenter trial including adult women and men with HR-positive, HER2-negative, node-positive, resected, early breast cancer with clinical and pathological features consistent with a high risk of recurrence. To be enrolled in cohort 1, patients must have either ≥4 pALN or 1-3 pALN and either tumour grade 3 or a tumour size ≥50 mm. To be enrolled in cohort 2, patients could not be eligible for cohort 1 and must have had 1-3 pALN and tumour Ki-67 score ≥20%. Patients were randomized to either 2 years of abemaciclib plus physician’s choice of standard endocrine therapy (tamoxifen or an aromatase inhibitor) or standard endocrine therapy alone.

The major efficacy outcome measure was invasive disease-free survival (IDFS). A statistically significant difference was observed in the intent-to-treat (ITT) population, primarily attributed to the patients in cohort 1 (cohort 1 N=5120 [91%]; IDFS HR 0.653 (95% CI: 0.567, 0.753)). IDFS at 48 months was 85.5% (95% CI: 83.8, 87.0) for abemaciclib plus standard endocrine therapy and 78.6% (95% CI: 76.7, 80.4) for standard endocrine therapy alone. Overall survival data remains immature, however, in cohort 2, more deaths were observed with abemaciclib plus standard endocrine therapy compared to standard endocrine therapy alone (10/253 vs. 5/264). Therefore, the indication was restricted to cohort 1.

The most common adverse reactions (≥20%) were diarrhoea, infections, neutropenia, fatigue, leukopenia, nausea, anaemia, and headache.

The recommended abemaciclib starting dose is 150 mg taken twice daily with tamoxifen or an aromatase inhibitor until completion of 2 years of treatment or until disease recurrence or unacceptable toxicity.

This review used the Assessment Aid, a voluntary submission from the applicant to facilitate the FDA’s assessment. The FDA approved this application 2 months ahead of the FDA goal date.

View full prescribing information for abemaciclib here.

Source: FDA