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UnknownNCT05189067

Efficacy and Safety of Adjuvant Docetaxel and Trastuzumab in Stage I HER2-positive Breast Cancer

A Single-center, Prospective, Randomized Study of Adjuvant Paclitaxel and Trastuzumab Versus Docetaxel and Trastuzumab in Stage I HER2 Positive Breast Cancer

Status
Unknown
Phase
Phase 2 / Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
190 (estimated)
Sponsor
Second Affiliated Hospital, School of Medicine, Zhejiang University · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
18 Years – 70 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Among women with stage I HER2-positive breast cancer, adjuvant weekly paclitaxel plus trastuzumab (PH, qw×12) is one of the standard therapies. However, it is quite inconvenient for patients to received weekly treatment for 12 weeks, which also increased the patients' and social economic burdens. In our study, a prospective, randomized, open-label, single-center clinical study was conducted to compare the efficacy and safety of adjuvant docetaxel plus trastuzumab (TH, q3w×4) and the classic regimen (PH, qw×12) in stage I HER2-positive breast cancer in Chinese population.

Detailed description

HER2-positive breast cancer accounts for about 20% of invasive breast cancers and was historically associated with poor clinical outcomes. Trastuzumab, a humanized monoclonal antibody that binds HER2, improved the outcomes for patients with HER2-positive breast cancer. Four phase 3 randomized trials (HERA, the North Central Cancer Treatment Group N9831, the National Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project B-31 and BCIRG006) involving more than 8000 patients showed that when trastuzumab was administered in combination with or after chemotherapy, the risk of recurrence was decreased by approximately 50% and overall survival improved. For patients with lymph node negative, early stage HER2-positive breast cancer, epirubicin/cyclophosphamide followed by docetaxel/trastuzumab (AC-TH) or docetaxel/carboplatin/trastuzumab (TCbH) adjuvant regimen is still widely used, although a smaller absolute benefit is expected. According to the long-term survival outcome of the Adjuvant Paclitaxel and Trastuzumab (APT) trial, patients with tumors measuring up to 3 cm in greatest dimension, negative axillary lymph node or with only micrometastasis, who received adjuvant paclitaxel 80mg/m2 weekly for 12 times plus 1 year trastuzumab, achieved a 3-year disease free survival (DFS) of 98.5%, 5-year DFS of 96.3%, 7-year DFS of 93.3%. The FDA compared the outcome of APT trial with external controls from previous clinical trials, both DFS and overall survival (OS) were similar. However, weekly regimen is quite inconvenient for patients, which also increased the patients'and social economic burdens in China. Docetaxel, a newly developed taxoid anticancer agent, works a comparable way to paclitaxel. In the clinical trial E1199, early breast cancer patients receiving adjuvant adriamycin and cyclophosphamide (AC) followed by docetaxel every 3 weeks achieved similar outcomes with AC followed weekly paclitaxel. In our study, a prospective, randomized, open-label, single-center clinical study is conducted to compare the efficacy and safety of adjuvant docetaxel plus trastuzumab (TH, q3w×4) and the classic regimen (PH, qw×12) in stage I HER2-positive breast cancer in Chinese population.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGPaclitaxeli.v. 80mg/m\^2
DRUGTrastuzumabi.v. loading dose of 8 mg/kg, followed by 6mg/kg
DRUGDocetaxeli.v. 100mg/m2

Timeline

Start date
2022-01-31
Primary completion
2025-01-31
Completion
2025-06-30
First posted
2022-01-12
Last updated
2022-01-12

Locations

1 site across 1 country: China

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05189067. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.