Conference Coverage

Adjuvant trastuzumab for breast cancer: 6 months may suffice


 

REPORTING FROM ASCO 2018

Study details

Patients enrolled in PERSEPHONE had stage Ia to IIIa breast cancer. They were randomized evenly to either 6 months (9 cycles) or 12 months (18 cycles) of adjuvant trastuzumab, given with or after completion of chemotherapy.

Main results showed that the 4-year rate of disease-free survival was 89.8% with 12 months of trastuzumab and 89.4% with 6 months of trastuzumab (hazard ratio, 1.07; P for noninferiority = .01), Dr. Earl reported.

Cardiotoxicity data for the trial population, previously reported (Br J Cancer. 2016 Dec 6;115[12]:1462-70), showed that the rate of stopping trastuzumab because of this adverse effect was 8% with the standard-duration therapy and 4% with the shorter-duration therapy (P less than .0001). Patients saw recovery of cardiac function after stopping the drug (P less than .0001), with more rapid recovery in the shorter-duration group (P = .02).

Pages

Recommended Reading

Patient Knowledge of and Barriers to Breast, Colon, and Cervical Cancer Screenings: A Cross-Sectional Survey of TRICARE Beneficiaries (FULL)
Breast Cancer ICYMI
2017 notches up some landmark approvals
Breast Cancer ICYMI
How does oral contraceptive use affect one’s risk of ovarian, endometrial, breast, and colorectal cancers?
Breast Cancer ICYMI
VIDEO: Office-based hereditary cancer risk testing is doable
Breast Cancer ICYMI
Universal BRCA testing worthwhile for relatives of high-grade serous ovarian cancer patients
Breast Cancer ICYMI
Integrating survivorship care planning in radiation oncology workflow
Breast Cancer ICYMI
Novel targeted cancer drugs cause fewer arrhythmias
Breast Cancer ICYMI
Intravenous antiemetic combination is well tolerated
Breast Cancer ICYMI
Breast cancer: More pathogenic variants detected as multiple-gene sequencing takes over
Breast Cancer ICYMI
Female cancer researchers receive less funding than male counterparts
Breast Cancer ICYMI