Long-term pooled safety analysis of palbociclib in combination with endocrine therapy for HR1/HER2- Advanced breast cancer

Véronique Diéras*, Hope S. Rugo, Patrick Schnell, Karen Gelmon, Massimo Cristofanilli, Sherene Loi, Marco Colleoni, Dongrui R. Lu, Ave Mori, Eric Gauthier, Cynthia Huang Bartlett, Dennis J. Slamon, Nicholas C. Turner, Richard S. Finn

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

64 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Palbociclib administered with endocrine therapy was tolerable when the overall incidence of toxicities was assessed separately for three PALOMA studies. This study analyzed pooled, longer-term PALOMA safety data longitudinally. Methods: Data were pooled from three randomized phase II and III studies (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT00721409, NCT01740427, NCT01942135) of hormone receptor-positive/human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative advanced breast cancer patients. Front-line patients were randomly assigned to receive letrozole with/without palbociclib (PALOMA-1) or letrozole plus palbociclib/placebo (PALOMA-2). In PALOMA-3, patients with prior endocrine resistance received fulvestrant plus palbociclib/placebo. The cumulative event rates of adverse events (AEs), reporting up to 50 months of treatment, were assessed over time. Results: Patients who received endocrine therapy (n ¼ 1343) were included in this pooled analysis (872 were also treated with palbociclib, and 471 were not). The most common AEs with palbociclib plus endocrine therapy were neutropenia and infections (any grade, 80.6% and 54.7%, respectively), which were higher than in the endocrine monotherapy arm (any grade, 5.3% and 36.9%). The most common hematologic AEs (15.0% in the palbociclib arm) were more likely to be reported in the initial months of the study, after which time the cumulative event rate did not substantially increase. With palbociclib plus endocrine therapy, any grade AEs leading to permanent discontinuation over three years occurred in only 8.3% of patients. Conclusions: Based on these long-term safety analyses, there is no evidence of specific cumulative or delayed toxicities with palbociclib plus endocrine therapy, supporting the ongoing investigation of palbociclib plus endocrine therapy in early breast cancer (NCT02513394).

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numberdjy109
JournalJournal of the National Cancer Institute
Volume111
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 1 2019

Funding

We thank the patients, investigators, and study personnel who participated in the PALOMA trials. PALOMA studies 1, 2, and 3 (NCT00721409, NCT01740427, NCT01942135, respectively) were sponsored by Pfizer. Editorial support was provided by Susan Reinwald, PhD, and Johna Van Stelten, PhD, both of Complete Healthcare Communications, LLC (West Chester, PA), a CHC Group Company, and was funded by Pfizer.

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Oncology
  • Cancer Research

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