Pills Show Promise as an Alternative to Chemotherapy in CU Cancer Center Member’s Breast Cancer Study (2024)

Science News

The trial of a three-drug co*cktail is the first for a new research consortium of which the CU Cancer Center is a partner.

February 14, 2024 By University of Colorado Cancer Center

The focus of a University of Colorado Cancer Center member’s research career has been a quest for new, better therapies for patients with breast cancer. That quest by Elena Shagisultanova, MD, PhD, has resulted in a clinical trial pointing the way to an oral treatment that’s more tolerable than intensive chemotherapy for patients with a type of metastatic breast cancer that accounts for about 20% of cases among women under age 45.

“Especially when women are young, usually they also work and have kids and they want to be active. They don’t want to experience chemo side effects, hair loss, other physical changes, and severe fatigue associated with chemotherapy. We wanted a pure targeted therapy which is much milder compared to chemo,” says Shagisultanova, associate professor in the Division of Medical Oncology at the University of Colorado School of Medicine.

Her study published Dec. 15 in Clinical Cancer Research – was the first to be completed as part of the Academic Breast Cancer Consortium (ABRCC). It’s a new collaboration of the CU Cancer Center and several other leading research institutions, which states its goal as “expediting the process of identifying and efficiently testing active new compounds for the treatment of breast cancer.”

The CU Cancer Center is Colorado’s only ABRCC member. Peter Kabos, MD, another Cancer Center member and a professor of medical oncology at the CU School of Medicine, is its director.

The trial investigated combining a three-drug co*cktail of oral treatments – tucatinib, letrozole, and palbociclib, and – to target HR+/HER2+ metastatic breast cancer, a form that disproportionately impacts younger women. Shagisultanova and co-investigators called this combination “TLP” for the first letters of each drug.

The result: TLP “showed excellent efficacy for an all-oral, chemotherapy-free regimen warranting further testing,” the study says.

Countering crosstalk

Shagisultanova says her CU Cancer Center mentor, Virginia Borges, MD, steered her years ago toward specializing in young women with breast cancer. In her practice, she has encountered many breast cancer patients with the HR+/HER2+ subtype. HR+ cancer cells have receptors for the hormones estrogen or progesterone, which can spur growth of the tumor. HER2+ is a protein that also helps cancer cells grow quickly.

According to the National Cancer Institute, about 10% of new breast cancer cases between 2016 and 2020 were of the HR+/HER+ subtype. The five-year survival rate for the subtype ranges from 99.1% to 45.6% depending on the stage at diagnosis. NCI says. In young patients, this HR+/HER2+ breast cancer is more common (up to 20% of breast cancer cases in patients 45 years or younger), as Shagisultanova showed in her recent paper in Clinical Cancer Research.

Traditionally, treatment for such cancers has often involved intensive intravenous chemotherapy over an extended period. Shagisultanova has been seeking an effective oral alternative.

“When you have so many receptors essentially commanding the tumor cells to grow, it’s tempting to try to block them,” Shagisultanova says. But using two oral treatments targeting HR+ and HER+ specifically has been only “variably successful,” she says, because of complex molecular signaling “crosstalk” between the receptors that can thwart each drug’s effectiveness.

A 3-drug approach

The new study was aimed at showing that adding a third drug to the co*cktail could improve effectiveness and provide a suitable all-oral alternative to chemotherapy. Lab work by Shagisultanova and Borges led them to think that tucatinib in combination with letrozole and palbociclib -- the TLP co*cktail -- could produce even better results, as they reported in a 2022 paper.

Tucatinib is a targeted HER2 inhibitor, palbociclib is what’s known as a CDK4/6 inhibitor that stops cancer cells from rushing through the cell cycle required for fast growth, and letrozole is an anti-hormonal drug that restricts the ability of cancers to drive growth using estrogen. All are prescribed in tablet form.

In the TLP trial, 42 women ages 22 to 81 years were enrolled between 2017 and 2020, including some “pretty sick” patients and about 15 whose cancer had spread to the brain, Shagisultanova says. The trial was conducted at six ABRCC-member sites: the CU Cancer Center, University of Arizona, Northwestern University, University of New Mexico, Stony Brook University in New York, and University of Texas Health Sciences Center in San Antonio.

The study cites a clinical benefit rate for the three-drug treatment of 70.4%.

“Very, very early, it became apparent that the drug combination was working,” Shagisultanova says. “We had several very long-term survivors who stayed on this combination for more than three years. I still have a patient who continues to be on this combination outside of the trial, after about five years, which we are very happy about.”

More agile and dynamic

Shagisultanova credits her CU Cancer Center colleague Kabos with being “very helpful and instrumental” with her research. And thanks to ABRCC’s involvement, “we recruited at all sites from the start and completed the study very quickly,” she says.

“Behind this consortium is that we really have to become much more agile and dynamic in the way we do clinical trials and accelerate getting drugs approved and getting them to patients,” she says.

Also providing key support for the study were the CU Cancer Center’s Developmental Therapeutics Program, Tumor Host Interactions Program, and Biostatistics and Bioinformatics Shared Resource.

Looking ahead, Shagisultanova hopes to extend study of the triple-combination treatment to patients in earlier stages of breast cancer “to see if we can shrink their tumors sufficiently to prepare them for surgery.”

Her research work is personal to her, she says.

“I went to a conference in San Antonio, and I saw cancer patient advocates standing with signs saying, ‘We are dying when you are discussing,’ and it’s very sad. We should really accelerate trials that bring novel therapies to patients.”

Shagisultanova says she is “very happy that I was able to help quite a few patients in the trial. Even if you make a difference in the life of one patient, it makes you happy.”

This story was published by the University of Colorado Cancer Center on January29, 2024. It is republished with permission.

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  • #cancer treatment
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Pills Show Promise as an Alternative to Chemotherapy in CU Cancer Center Member’s Breast Cancer Study (2024)

FAQs

Is there a pill form of chemo for breast cancer? ›

Capecitabine is currently the only FDA-approved chemotherapy pill that's frequently used to treat breast cancer, said Saranya Chumsri, MD, a hematologist-oncologist at the Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Florida. It has been approved since the late 90s and can be very effective.

What is the 5 year pill for breast cancer? ›

You take tamoxifen daily at the same time every day. To treat early breast cancer, most people take tamoxifen for 5 years. In some situations, you might take it longer.

What is the promising drug for breast cancer? ›

In 2020, the Food and Drug Administration approved Phesgo, a new drug that offers faster administration of Herceptin and Perjeta, and City of Hope is now offering this drug to patients who qualify. Phesgo is given by subcutaneous injection and the first dose takes only eight minutes to administer.

What is the daily pill for breast cancer? ›

Tamoxifen. Tamoxifen is usually taken daily in pill form. It's often used to reduce the risk of cancer recurrence after treatment for early-stage breast cancer. In this situation, it's typically taken for 5 to 10 years.

What is the miracle drug for breast cancer? ›

This revolutionary breast cancer drug has saved millions of lives in its 25-year history. UCLA Health oncologist Dr. Dennis Slamon and his team brought forward Herceptin, the first FDA-approved gene-based drug to fight cancer, back in 1988.

What is the new tablet for breast cancer? ›

Enhertu is a type of antibody drug conjugate and works by directly targeting the HER2 proteins expressed by this type of cancer, killing the cancer cells.

What is the $30000 cancer pill? ›

A medicine called Folotyn, approved earlier this year for patients with a rare form of lymphoma, costs $30,000 per month, the New York Times reports. The drug hasn't been proven to extend patients' lives; in a study cited by the FDA, tumors shrank in 27% of patients who took the drug.

How much does the pill increase risk of breast cancer? ›

It's estimated there will be: An extra 8 cases of breast cancer for every 100,000 women who take the pill between the ages of 16 and 20. An extra 265 cases of breast cancer for every 100,000 women who take the pill between the ages of 35 and 39.

What is the new breast cancer drug approved by Nice? ›

Around 300 people are set to benefit following NICE's recommendation of talazoparib for treating a type of locally advanced or metastatic breast cancer in final draft guidance published today (19 January 2024).

What is the new treatment for breast cancer in 2024? ›

From 1 May 2024, Verzenio will be expanded on the PBS to treat patients with hormone receptor positive (HR+), human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 negative (HER2-), lymph node positive, invasive, resected early breast cancer at high risk of disease recurrence.

What is the new drug to reduce breast cancer? ›

Anastrozole is now authorised as a preventative treatment for post-menopausal women at moderate or high risk of breast cancer. The Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) has today authorised this new indication for Anastrozole, a hormone treatment used for breast cancer in post-menopausal women.

Can you live 30 years with metastatic breast cancer? ›

Many women with metastatic breast cancer will live only a handful of years, says Hendershott. But about one-third will live at least five years after their diagnosis. And “there are people who have been living with stage IV breast cancer for more than 15 years,” she says.

What is the breast cancer pill instead of chemo? ›

Tamoxifen is usually prescribed as a pill taken once a day by mouth. For breast cancer risk reduction, tamoxifen is typically taken for a total of five years. The risk reduction benefit continues for five additional years after you stop taking tamoxifen. In total, you could receive up to 10 years of benefit.

What type of cancer is treated with chemo pills? ›

What are some oral chemotherapy drugs?
Drug (generic name)Cancer type
altretamineovarian
capecitabinebreast, colorectal
cyclophosphamidebreast, ovarian, lymphoma, leukemia, multiple myeloma
etoposidesmall-cell lung cancer
Jul 5, 2022

What is the name of the breast cancer pill? ›

Tamoxifen (Nolvadex® or Soltamox®) is a drug that treats hormone receptor-positive (hormone-positive) breast cancer. (Hormone-positive breast cancer is a type of cancer that needs estrogen and/or progesterone to grow.)

Can breast cancer be treated with tablets? ›

Letrozole is available on prescription only and comes as tablets. It can also be used: to prevent breast cancer if you're high risk and have been through the menopause. to treat cancer if you cannot have surgery, or to shrink the cancer before surgery if you cannot have chemotherapy.

How long can you stay on chemo pills? ›

A course of chemotherapy usually lasts between 3 to 6 months, although it can be more or less than that. How often you have each cycle, and how long your treatment course lasts, depends on many factors. These include: type of cancer.

What is the most effective chemotherapy for breast cancer? ›

Doxorubicin is considered one of the strongest chemotherapy drugs for breast cancer ever invented. It can kill cancer cells at every point in their life cycle, and it's used to treat a wide variety of cancers, not just breast cancer. Doxorubicin is also known as “The Red Devil” because it is a clear bright red color.

What is the oral medication for stage 1 breast cancer? ›

Hormonal therapy for post-menopausal women with stage 1 breast cancer includes tamoxifen (an anti-estrogen) and aromatase inhibitors. You may be offered one of the following options: tamoxifen (Nolvadex, Tamofen) alone for up to 10 years. an aromatase inhibitor alone for up to 10 years.

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