The proton pump inhibitor (PPI) omeprazole may be a useful addition to treatment for triple-negative breast cancer, as it boosted the expected rate of tumor disappearance among women with early-stage disease, according to the results of a phase 2 trial.
The trial results are presented online at the 2020 virtual annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
The rationale behind the approach includes the fact that PPIs inhibit fatty acid synthase (FASN), an enzyme overexpressed in 70% of newly diagnosed triple-negative breast cancers (TNBC) and associated with poor prognosis.
In the study, omeprazole, a generic drug for gastroesophageal reflux, was added to standard chemotherapy. Both were given to 42 women as neoadjuvant treatment in the weeks before breast surgery at five US centers in the single-arm study.
The pathologic complete response (pCR) rate was 71% in the study population, which is higher than the typical 40% seen in patients treated with standard AC-T (adriamycin and cyclophosphamide plus a taxane), said lead author Sagar D. Sardesai, MBBS, a medical oncologist at Ohio State Comprehensive Cancer Center in Columbus.
“It’s exciting,” said Dr. Sardesai in an interview. “Overall, triple-negative patients who achieve a pCR have a very good outcome.”
That complete disappearance of the tumor is a surrogate for overall survival in TNBC, and patients who achieve it have a greatly reduced risk of recurrence or death, he explained.
Natalie Berger, MD, medical oncologist, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York City, said the study’s pCR rates were “much higher” than expected and “intriguing and hypothesis generating.”
But Dr. Berger, who was not involved in the study, wanted to see more data.
“Having a non-chemotherapeutic agent to offer our patients with TNBC that improves pCR rates without added toxicity would be an exciting finding, but we need a larger randomized study,” she said in an email.
The researchers, who include high-profile breast cancer specialist Kathy Miller, MD, of Indiana University, are seeking a National Cancer Institute or Department of Defense grant to mount a 100-plus patient randomized trial.
Potential Drug Target for Some Years
Dr. Sardesai explained that FASN, which is an enzyme, helps generate fatty acids that are a key to cancer cell survival. FASN is primarily found in hormone-dominated tissue such as those of the endometrium, prostate, and breast.
PPIs “selectively inhibit FASN activity and induce apoptosis in breast cancer cell lines with minimal effect on non-malignant cells,” wrote the study authors in their meeting abstract.
The only other known agent known to inhibit FASN is the weight loss drug orlistat, which is poorly absorbed by the body and unlikely to impact cancer cells, Dr. Sardesai said.
FASN has been a potential drug target in TNBC for 10 to 15 years, but the first clinical evidence of efficacy in solid tumors was only seen in the last 5 years, he commented.
In 2015, Chinese investigators reported that the PPI esomeprazole in combination with chemotherapy produced a 5-month improvement in progression-free survival (vs. chemo alone) among a subset of 15 TNBC patients in a randomized trial of 94 patients with a variety of breast cancer types.