Neoadjuvant nivolumab and chemotherapy in early estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer: a randomized phase 3 trial

Other authors

Institut Català de la Salut

[Loi S] Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, Australia. [Salgado R] Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Department of Pathology, ZAS Hospitals, Antwerp, Belgium. [Curigliano G] European Institute of Oncology, IRCCS, Milan, Italy. University of Milan, Milan, Italy. [Romero Díaz RI] Consultorio de Oncólogo Médico, Oaxaca, Mexico. [Delaloge S] Gustave Roussy Cancer Campus, Villejuif, France. [Rojas García CI] Bradford Hill Investigación Clinica, Región Metropolitana, Santiago, Chile. [Saura C] Vall d’Hebron Hospital Universitari, Barcelona, Spain. Vall d’Hebron Institute of Oncology (VHIO), Barcelona, Spain

Vall d'Hebron Barcelona Hospital Campus

Publication date

2025-03-31T10:18:14Z

2025-03-31T10:18:14Z

2025-02



Abstract

Neoadjuvant nivolumab; Breast cancer; Estrogen receptor


Nivolumab neoadyuvante; Cáncer de mama; Receptor de estrógeno


Nivolumab neoadjuvant; Càncer de mama; Receptors d'estrògen


Patients with estrogen receptor-positive (ER+), human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative (HER2−) primary breast cancer (BC) have low pathological complete response (pCR) rates with neoadjuvant chemotherapy. A subset of ER+/HER2− BC contains dense lymphocytic infiltration. We hypothesized that addition of an anti-programmed death 1 agent may increase pCR rates in this BC subtype. We conducted a randomized, multicenter, double-blind phase 3 trial to investigate the benefit of adding nivolumab to neoadjuvant chemotherapy in patients with newly diagnosed, high-risk, grade 3 or 2 (ER 1 to ≤10%) ER+/HER2− primary BC. In total, 510 patients were randomized to receive anthracycline and taxane-based chemotherapy with either intravenous nivolumab or placebo. The primary endpoint of pCR was significantly higher in the nivolumab arm compared with placebo (24.5% versus 13.8%; P = 0.0021), with greater benefit observed in patients with programmed death ligand 1-positive tumors (VENTANA SP142 ≥1%: 44.3% versus 20.2% respectively). There were no new safety signals identified. Of the five deaths that occurred in the nivolumab arm, two were related to study drug toxicity; no deaths occurred in the placebo arm. Adding nivolumab to neoadjuvant chemotherapy significantly increased pCR rates in high-risk, early-stage ER+/HER2− BC, particularly among patients with higher stromal tumor-infiltrating lymphocyte levels or programmed death ligand 1 expression, suggesting a new treatment paradigm that emphasizes the role of immunotherapy and T cell immunosurveillance in luminal disease. Clinical trials.gov identifier: NCT04109066

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

Nature Portfolio

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Attribution 4.0 International

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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