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Sacituzumab govitecan as second-line treatment for metastatic triple-negative breast cancer-phase 3 ASCENT study subanalysis

  • Lisa A Carey
  • , Delphine Loirat
  • , Kevin Punie
  • , Aditya Bardia
  • , Véronique Diéras
  • , Florence Dalenc
  • , Jennifer R Diamond
  • , Christel Fontaine
  • , Grace Wang
  • , Hope S Rugo
  • , Sara A Hurvitz
  • , Kevin Kalinsky
  • , Joyce O'Shaughnessy
  • , Sibylle Loibl
  • , Luca Gianni
  • , Martine Piccart
  • , Yanni Zhu
  • , Rosemary Delaney
  • , See Phan
  • , Javier Cortés

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Patients with triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) who relapse early after (neo)adjuvant chemotherapy have more aggressive disease. In the ASCENT trial, sacituzumab govitecan (SG), an antibody-drug conjugate composed of an anti-Trop-2 antibody coupled to SN-38 via a hydrolyzable linker, improved outcomes over single-agent chemotherapy of physician's choice (TPC) in metastatic TNBC (mTNBC). Of 468 patients without known baseline brain metastases, 33/235 vs 32/233 patients (both 14%) in the SG vs TPC arms, respectively, received one line of therapy in the metastatic setting and experienced disease recurrence ≤12 months after (neo)adjuvant chemotherapy. SG prolonged progression-free survival (median 5.7 vs 1.5 months [HR, 0.41; 95% CI, 0.22-0.76]) and overall survival (median 10.9 vs 4.9 months [HR, 0.51; 95% CI, 0.28-0.91]) vs TPC, with a manageable safety profile in this subgroup consistent with the overall population. In this second-line setting, as with later-line therapy, SG improved survival over conventional chemotherapy for patients with mTNBC.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)72
JournalNPJ breast cancer
Volume8
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - May 9 2022

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