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Review

Targeted treatment of advanced and metastaticbreast cancer with lapatinib

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Pages 21-34 | Published online: 16 Sep 2008

Abstract

Improved molecular understanding of breast cancer in recent years has led to the discovery of important drug targets such as HER-2 and EGFR. Lapatinib is a potent dual inhibitor of HER-2 and EGFR. Preclinical and phase I studies have shown activity with lapatinib in a number of cancers, including breast cancer, and the drug is well tolerated. The main known drug interactions are with paclitaxel and irinotecan. The most significant side-effects of lapatinib are diarrhea and adverse skin events. Rates of cardiotoxicity compare favorably with trastuzumab, a monoclonal antibody against HER-2. This paper focuses on lapatinib in advanced and metastatic breast cancer, which remains an important therapeutic challenge. Phase II and III studies show activity as monotherapy, and in combination with chemotherapy or hormonal agents. Results from these studies suggest that the main benefit from lapatinib is in the HER-2 positive breast cancer population. Combinations of lapatinib and trastuzumab are also being studied and show encouraging results, particularly in trastuzumab-refractory metastatic breast cancer. Lapatinib may have a specific role in treating HER-2 positive CNS metastases. The role of lapatinib as neoadjuvant therapy and in early breast cancer is also being evaluated.

Management issues in treatment of locally advanced and metastatic breast cancer

The molecular revolution in oncology is having a major impact on the pharmacotherapy of breast cancer, a disease which has long been recognized as the most drug-sensitive of the common adult solid tumors. The majority of patients whose tumors express steroid hormone receptors will respond for variable periods of time to endocrine therapy with varying degrees of clinical benefit. For those whose tumors lack such receptors, and in the case of receptor positive cancers that become resistant to endocrine agents, conventional cytotoxic chemotherapy produces frequent responses.

These responses frequently palliate the distressing symptoms of cancer, and provide a meaningful degree of survival prolongation. The overwhelming majority of these responses end in relapse, however, and cure remains essentially anecdotal. Chemotherapy and endocrine therapy produce a greater impact when they are given to patients with earlier stage disease as “adjuvants” to definitive loco-regional therapy (surgery and or radiotherapy). “Neoadjuvant” or “induction” therapy refers to the strategy of administering systemic treatments to patients prior to definitive loco-regional therapy. Induction therapy can render inoperable tumors resectable, and can increase the prospects for breast conservation. There are also theoretical advantages to the early initiation of systemic therapy in these patients, eg, the delivery of drugs through intact vasculature, in vivo assessment of response to drugs, and the opportunity to study the biological effects of treatment.

Chemotherapy is, however, a very non-specific treatment, which is injurious to normal as well as malignant tissues, producing clinical toxicity, which can be severe. In addition, most chemotherapeutic agents were developed empirically, often in advance of an understanding of their mechanisms of action.

Recent years have seen an improved molecular understanding of breast cancer biology, an understanding which has ushered in an era of specific molecular therapeutics for breast cancer. One of the most intensively studied systems, and one which has already proven vulnerable to pharmacotherapy, is the human epidermal growth factor system.

The epidermal growth factor receptor system in breast cancer

The c-erbB or HER (human epidermal growth factor receptor) family of transmembrane tyrosine kinases consists of four known members (epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), HER-2, HER-3, and HER-4). These receptors consist of an extracellular domain, a transmembrane region, and an intracellular domain with tyrosine kinase function except HER-3 which lacks kinase activity. When a ligand binds to a receptor, the receptor forms homo-or hetero-dimers, which leads to the activation of tyrosine residues in the intracellular domain. There are numerous Erb ligands, including epidermal growth factor (EGF), TGF-α, epiregulin, amphiregulin, and neuregulins. However, HER-2 has no known ligand, and appears to mediate its effects through dimerization with other members of the HER family. Important downstream proteins activated by these pathways include the PI3K-Akt and the RAF–MEK–MAPK pathways, which have key roles in cell proliferation and survival (reviewed in [CitationYarden and Sliwkowski 2001]).

The HER-2 gene is over-expressed and/or amplified in approximately 20%–30% of invasive breast cancers and is associated with more aggressive tumor behavior and decreased overall survival (CitationSlamon et al 1987). A review of 40 different studies, which included 5,232 patients, reported that on average 45% of breast cancers were positive for EGFR (range 14%–91%) (CitationKlijn et al 1992). The range of positivity reported may relate to different methods of detecting EGFR. EGFR expression has been associated with poorer prognosis in breast cancer (CitationSainsbury et al 1987; CitationToi et al 1994).

Trastuzumab, a monoclonal antibody against HER-2 was the first targeted therapy available in HER-2 over-expressing breast cancer, and has become first-line treatment in both early and advanced disease (CitationEngel and Kaklamani 2007). Trastuzumab acts by binding to the extracellular domain of HER-2 and also mediates antibody-dependent cellular cytoxicity (ADCC) (CitationCooley et al 1999). Trastuzumab enhances response to chemotherapy and has significantly improved outcomes in this subgroup of patients. However, not all patients with HER-2 over-expressing breast cancers respond to trastuzumab therapy. In the metastatic setting, the response rate to trastuzumab monotherapy is less than 35% (CitationVogel et al 2002), and most patients who respond initially develop resistance within two years (CitationNahta and Esteva 2007). Trastuzumab therapy has also been associated with significant rates of cardiomyopathy, in particular when administered in combination with anthracyclines, or to patients with prior anthracycline exposure. The incidence of brain metastases in patients with HER-2 positive disease increases on trastuzumab treatment, possibly reflecting improved extra-cerebral disease control with this agent which does not cross the blood–brain barrier (BBB) (CitationClayton et al 2004).

A number of EGFR inhibitors are also licensed for use in clinical oncology. These include the small molecule tyrosine kinase inhibitors gefitinib (CitationBaselga and Averbuch 2000) and erlotinib (CitationPollack et al 1999), and the monoclonal antibody cetuximab (CitationGoldstein et al 1995). However, to date, clinical trials with EGFR inhibitors have yielded disappointing results in breast cancer therapy. Gefitinib monotherapy in metastatic breast cancer showed response rates of 2%–13% (Citationvon Minckwitz et al 2005). Erlotinib and cetuximab have been studied in combination with chemotherapy in advanced breast cancer. Reports from trials to date have not shown any enhanced benefit with addition of EGFR inhibitors to chemotherapy. However, a number of trials with these agents are ongoing, and may have therapeutic benefits in specific subgroups of breast cancer, such as triple negative disease.

Lapatinib is a dual inhibitor of HER-2 and EGFR. It has shown promising results in clinical trials in breast cancer and is now approved for the treatment of trastuzumab-refractory HER-2 positive metastatic breast cancer. This review focuses on the use of lapatinib in advanced and metastatic breast cancer.

Lapatinib: pharmacology, mode of action and pharmacokinetics

Pharmacology and mode of action

Lapatinib (GW572016, Tykerb®/Tyverb®) is an orally bio-available 6-thiazolylquinazoline which is a potent dual inhibitor of EGFR and HER-2 (CitationGaul et al 2003). Lapatinib binds to the adenosine triphosphate (ATP) binding site of both EGFR and HER-2. Lapatinib binds to the inactive form of EGFR and has a slower dissociation rate than selective EGFR inhibitors, such as erlotinib, which binds to the active form of EGFR. The estimated dissociation constants (Kiapp) of lapatinib for EGFR and HER-2 are 3.0 ± 0.2 nM and 13 ± 1 nM respectively (CitationWood et al 2004). Lapatinib inhibits purified EGFR and HER-2 with a >300-fold selectivity in comparison to other kinases, and with IC50 values <12 nM () (CitationRusnak et al 2001).

Table 1 Kinase inhibition by lapatinib (GW572016) (adapted from CitationRusnak et al 2001)

Preclinical models have shown that tumor cell lines (derived from a number of different tumor types including breast, head and neck, vulva, lung, and gastric) which over-express either EGFR or HER-2 are more sensitive to lapatinib. CitationRusnak et al (2007) described a model for determining lapatinib sensitivity in cell lines. Using a panel of human normal and tumor cell lines (including breast, colon, gastric, head and neck, lung, ovarian, and pancreatic cancer cell lines), IC50 values ranged from 0.025 μM to 11.5 μM (breast tumors range 0.025–7.01 μM). Cell line sensitivity correlated with receptor function, particularly HER-2, although cell lines with increased EGFR expression and modest HER-2 expression also showed sensitivity. Simultaneous consideration of both receptors was found to be the best predictor of response.

Lapatinib binding of EGFR and HER-2 has been shown to decrease EGFR, HER-2, Raf, AKT, and MAPK activity (CitationXia et al 2002; CitationKonecny et al 2006; CitationZhou et al 2006; CitationNahta et al 2007). MAPK and AKT may be important biomarkers of response to lapatinib. MAPK is involved in proliferation, and AKT is a key pathway in cell survival (CitationXia et al 2002). CitationXia et al (2002) reported that lapatinib markedly decreases phosphorylation of MAPK and AKT in the HER-2 over-expressing BT474 breast cancer cell line, and in human tumor xenografts. In vitro, this corresponded with a 23-fold increase in apoptosis. Using gene expression profiles, CitationHegde et al (2007) have shown that lapatinib treatment results in strong differential regulation of genes in the Akt pathway in sensitive breast cancer cell lines, compared with less sensitive cell lines (CitationHegde et al 2007). These include genes involved in cell cycle control and cellular metabolic processes. In particular, lapatinib up-regulates the pro-apoptotic gene FoxO3A in the sensitive breast cancer cell lines BT474 and SKBR3.

Gene expression profiling also showed that lapatinib treatment stimulated hormone receptor expression in cell lines with moderate estrogen and progesterone levels (CitationHegde et al 2007). Interestingly, lapatinib has been shown to restore tamoxifen sensitivity in a resistant breast cancer cell line, via inhibition of estrogen-stimulated transcriptional activity (CitationChu et al 2005). Thus, lapatinib may sensitize hormone resistant tumors to hormonal agents.

Pharmacokinetics

In six healthy volunteers, administered a single oral dose of 250 mg lapatinib, the predominant route of excretion of lapatinib and its metabolites was feces (median 92%, range 60%–98%). Approximately 20% of the drug was excreted un-metabolized. Less than 2% excretion was urinary (EGF10019) (GlaxoSmithKline). Pharmacokinetic studies of single and multiple doses of lapatinib in healthy subjects have shown a lag in detecting serum levels of drug post ingestion, suggesting a delay in oral absorption. Peak serum concentrations occur at a median of three hours (range 1.5–6 hours) (CitationBence et al 2005). Lapatinib solubility is pH dependent, and decreases with increasing pH. This suggests that absorption may decrease as the drug passes through the gastro-intestinal (GI) tract (CitationBence et al 2005). It is recommended that lapatinib should be taken at least 1 hour before or after a meal. In general, increasing dose led to increasing serum levels. A drug half-life of 24 hours has been suggested, which lends itself to a once-daily dosing regime (CitationBence et al 2005).

Lapatinib exhibited a similar pharmacokinetic profile in heavily pretreated metastatic cancer patients. In the phase I study EGF10004, CitationBurris et al (2005) reported that peak serum concentrations were achieved at 3 to 6 hours. In general, increased dose led to increased serum concentration. The best dose-response activity with lapatinib was found at 1200 mg once daily, while doses from 500 to 1600 mg once daily were well tolerated. Trough serum levels in patients with tumor response to drug ranged from 0.3 to 0.6 μg/mL (CitationBurris et al 2005). Of note, animal studies have suggested drug penetration of tumors can be up to five times that of serum (CitationClark et al 2002).

Potential drug interactions

Lapatinib undergoes metabolism by cytochrome P450 isoenzymes. In vitro studies indicate that lapatinib is metabolized predominantly by CYP3A4 and CYP3A5, and to lesser extent by CYP2C19 (CitationHerendeen et al 2004; CitationSmith et al 2004). Healthy volunteers given the CYP3A4 inhibitor ketoconozole for 7 days (EGF10013) showed an increase in serum plasma concentration and the elimination half life of lapatinib (CitationSmith et al 2004). Volunteers administered the CYP3A4 inducer carbamazepine (EGF10018) showed decreased lapatinib serum concentrations (CitationHerendeen et al 2004). These data suggest the important role of CYP3A enzymes as one of the main pathways of lapatinib metabolism in vivo. As a result, co-prescribing of any drugs which inhibit or induce CYP3A should be considered carefully.

In the pharmacokinetic analysis of the phase I study combining lapatinib and paclitaxel (EGF10009), paclitaxel increased the area under the plasma concentration-time curve (AUC) of lapatinib by a factor of 1.2 (1.0–1.4), and the maximum plasma concentration (Cmax) by 1.4 (1.1–1.7) (CitationJones et al 2004, GlaxoSmithKline). The AUC of paclitaxel was increased by 1.2 (1.1–1.4) by the combination. Paclitaxel had been reported as a CYP3A4 substrate (CitationBeulz-Riche et al 2002). These pharmacokinetic data suggest that paclitaxel may act as an inhibitor of CYP3A4.

There was also a significant drug interaction between lapatinib and SN-38, the active metabolite of irinotecan, in a phase I study of lapatinib and FOLFIRI chemotherapy (EGF10011) (CitationMidgley et al 2007). The AUC for SN-38 increased by 41% and Cmax increased by 32%. No significant pharmacokinetic interactions have been found between lapatinib and capecitabine (CitationChu et al 2007), trastuzumab (CitationStorniolo et al 2008), letrozole (GlaxoSmithKline), oxaliplatin and 5-FU (CitationSiegel-Lakhai et al 2007), or docetaxel (GlaxoSmithKline).

Membrane-bound drug transporters (eg, ABC efflux transporters P-gp and BCRP) play an important role in the transport of many substrates both into and out of cells, and play a role in tumor resistance to many traditional chemotherapy drugs (CitationO’Connor et al 2007). At physiological levels, lapatinib has been shown to be a both a substrate and an inhibitor of P-gp and BCRP, and an inhibitor of hepatic uptake transporter OATP 1B1 (CitationPolli et al 2008). Interestingly, efflux pumps in the BBB appear to account for low central nervous system (CNS) lapatinib concentrations in health. However, promising responses of brain metastases in clinical studies have led to the suggestion that there may be disruption of efflux pumps in disease (CitationPolli et al 2008).

Safety and tolerability of lapatinib

The safety and side-effect profile of lapatinib has been extensively monitored (). The most common toxicities associated with lapatinib use are diarrhea and rash. The potential cardiac toxicity of HER-2 inhibition has also been monitored.

Table 2 Phase I studies with lapatinib (GW572016)

Diarrhea

Diarrhea is the most commonly reported adverse event in clinical trials with lapatinib. Gastro-intestinal disturbance is a recognized side-effect of EGFR inhibitors. A pooled analysis of diarrhea events in patients treated with lapatinib (1000–1500 mg/day) in 11 completed clinical trials in a variety of solid tumors (phase I/II/III; n = 2093) has recently been published (CitationCrown et al 2008). The drug was administered as monotherapy (n = 926) or in combination with capecitabine (n = 198) or taxanes (n = 687). Overall, diarrhea was reported in 55% of patients treated with lapatinib, compared to 24% of those not receiving the drug. Diarrhea occurred more frequently in those treated with lapatinib and capecitabine (65%), compared with 51% of patients receiving lapatinib as monotherapy, and 48% in those receiving lapatinib and a taxane. Most events were grade 1/2. Grade 3 diarrhea occurred in less than 10% of cases, and grade 4 events were rare (≤1%). However, fatalities from septic shock have been reported in this setting.

The mechanism of GI upset related to EGFR inhibition has not been fully elucidated, and the side-effect profile of diarrhea with lapatinib use is similar to that reported with other EGFR inhibitors. However, it has been noted from pharmacokinetic studies that the frequency of diarrhea was dose-related, and not related to serum levels of the drug, suggesting a direct local action on the epithelium of the GI tract as a possible mechanism of action (CitationBurris et al 2005; CitationCrown et al 2008).

In general, lapatinib-related diarrheal events were mild to moderate, of early onset, and of short duration. The recommended practical management of diarrhea is not evidence based, but includes accepted steps similar to management of this condition when induced by other drugs (CitationMoy and Goss 2007). Improved understanding of the side-effect potential of lapatinib and early introduction of proactive measures in clinical studies to reduce this complication have decreased the frequency and severity of GI disturbances.

Cardiac toxicity

Cardiac toxicity has emerged as one the main adverse events associated with trastuzumab treatment. In the metastatic breast cancer setting, trastuzumab treatment is associated with approximately 10% grade 3 cardiac toxicity (CitationSlamon et al 2001). Anthracyclines (which are also cardiotoxic) in combination with trastuzumab result in increased cardiotoxicity. As a result, concomitant administration of trastuzumab with anthracyclines is generally not recommended outside clinical trials. It has been noted that trastuzumab-related heart failure tends to improve with discontinuation of treatment (CitationEwer et al 2005; CitationGuarneri et al 2006). In contrast, the rate of cardiac toxicity with lapatinib seems to be much lower. No significant cardiac toxicity was reported in the phase I pharmacokinetic study EGF10004 (CitationBurris et al 2005). CitationPerez et al (2008) analyzed cardiac toxicity in 44 lapatinib trials, involving 3689 patients. Lapatinib was administered as monotherapy or in combination with chemotherapy in these studies. Overall, 60 patients (2%) had a cardiac event, of which 7 were symptomatic. The mean time of onset of these events was 13 ± 9 weeks (95% CI, 2–54 weeks). The mean decrease in left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) was 18.8% ± 5.2% (95% CI, 11%–32%). Fifty-eight percent of the patients had a full (n = 19) or partial (n = 16) recovery. No predictive factors of LVEF decrease were identified. Many of the patients studied had prior or concurrent treatment including other cardiotoxic drugs such as anthracyclines and trastuzumab. However, the overall rate of cardiotoxicity reported is low and compares favorably with rates reported with trastuzumab (3%–27%) (CitationSeidman et al 2002). In relation to the safety of combined lapatinib and trastuzumab, preliminary safety data from a phase IIb study of pre-operative lapatinib combined with trastuzumab and chemotherapy has recently been reported (CitationGuarneri et al 2008). No significant cardiac toxicities have been reported after 24 weeks in the first 20 evaluable patients.

The precise reasons for the higher rate of cardiotoxicity with trastuzumab compared to lapatinib are not entirely clear. Inhibition of HER-2 signaling by trastuzumab may cause cardiomyocyte dysfunction (CitationGrazette et al 2004); however, this does not appear to be the case with lapatinib (CitationGeyer et al 2006). Although lapatinib and trastuzumab both target HER-2, it has been proposed that these drugs have different mechanisms of action. CitationSpector et al (2007) have shown that GW2974 (a dual EGFR/HER-2 small molecule inhibitor which is similar to lapatinib) initiates a stress response via AMP-activated protein kinase which protects against TNFα-mediated cell death in human cardiomyocytes. In contrast, trastuzumab does not activate this key metabolic pathway, and is not cardio-protective in the same way (CitationSpector et al 2007). A proposed differential mechanism of action of trastuzumab relates to the key signaling protein BCL-antagonist of death (BAD). Inhibition of HER-2 reverses BAD inhibition, which plays a role in mitochondrial function and apoptosis in breast cancer. In normal cardiomyocytes, HER-2 antibody-mediated modulation of BAD (which alters the ratio of BCL-XS (proapoptotic): BCl-XL (anti-apoptotic)), may cause mitochondrial depolarization, depletion of ATP and contractile dysfunction (CitationGrazette et al 2004). It has been suggested that this is an unique response to antibody binding and may explain the increased cardiotoxicity associated with trastuzumab (CitationForce et al 2007). Monitoring of potential cardiotoxicity is ongoing in trials of lapatinib.

Rash

Skin rash is a common adverse event associated with lapatinib use. This appears to be a class effect of drugs which inhibit EGFR, including gefitinib and erlotinib, and may be mediated by EGFR inhibition in the epidermis (CitationGordon et al 2005; CitationCersosimo 2006; CitationGeyer et al 2006; CitationLacouture 2006). A recent review analyzed adverse skin events in 1419 patients from 8 lapatinib trials (CitationSweetman et al 2007). These trials included lapatinib monotherapy (n = 928), and lapatinib in combination with capecitabine or paclitaxel (n = 491). Fifty-two percent of patients treated with lapatinib, and 73% of patients with combination treatment experienced adverse skin events. However, most events were low grade (53% grade 1 or 2; 6% grade 3; none grade 4) and treatment discontinuation was required in 1% of cases. Most lapatinib related events occurred early (within 14 days), and were distributed mainly on the trunk, and less frequently on the face (CitationSweetman et al 2007).

Interestingly, the severity of cutaneous side-effects with other EGFR inhibitors has been associated with improved tumor response (CitationPerez-Soler and Saltz 2005; CitationMoy and Goss 2007). While this has not been fully explored in relation to these drugs, the same may hold true for lapatinib, and may be a source of some comfort to those who experience rash as result of lapatinib use.

Other adverse events associated with lapatinib

Abnormal liver biochemistry and hyperbilirubinemia events have been reported in a number of lapatinib clinical studies (CitationBence et al 2005; CitationChu et al 2007; CitationSiegel-Lakhai et al 2007). An incidence of 0.4% hepatotoxicity in the entire lapatinib clinical trials program has been reported (http://www.gsk.com/media/pressreleases/2008/2008_pressrelease_10019.htm). These have been predominantly elevations in liver enzymes. In most cases patients have recovered once lapatinib has been discontinued. One case of hepatic failure related to lapatinib was reported in EGF20009 (n = 138), a first-line monotherapy phase II study (CitationGomez et al 2008). GlaxoSmithKline has recommended increased frequency of serum liver biochemistry monitoring.

Clinical studies have reported cases of interstitial pneumonitis with other EGFR inhibitors including gefitinib (CitationKonishi et al 2005; CitationSunaga et al 2007). No interstitial pneumonitis occurred in the lapatinib phase I study (EGF10004). There was one case of pulmonary metastases where fatal interstitial pneumonia developed, which was determined to be related to the underlying disease (CitationBurris et al 2005). There was also one case of pneumonitis (1/52) with the safety and tolerability study of lapatinib and docetaxel (EGF10021). This occurred at the highest dose used (lapatinib 1500 mg/docetaxel 75 mg/m2 q3wk) (GlaxoSmithKline). The overall incidence of pneumonitis with lapatinib treatment appears to be very low.

Quality of life issues

In general, lapatinib is a well tolerated drug in monotherapy (CitationBurris et al 2005). The most noteworthy side-effects are those listed above, and are generally of low grade.

In the combination study of lapatinib and FOLFOX4 chemotherapy (EGF10010), 10 of the 34 patients went off study as a result of drug-related adverse events, including diarrhea, fatigue, elevated serum bilirubin, weight loss, decreased LVEF, fatigue, hypersensitivity, and thrombocytopenia (CitationSiegel-Lakhai et al 2007). Diarrhea was a significant problem on this study, and this may have been due in part to the chemotherapy regimen.

Formal quality of life (QoL) assessment has recently been presented in relation to EGF100051, the pivotal phase III trial of combined lapatinib and capecitabine treatment in HER-2 positive metastatic breast cancer (CitationZhou et al 2008). The study aimed to assess clinically important differences between the group receiving the combination (n = 198) and capecitabine alone (n = 201). Outcome measures included quality of life measures (including the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Breast (FACT-B) total, FACT-general (FACT-G), trial outcome index (TOI), EQ-5D utility, and EQ-5D visual analogue scale (VAS), and percentage tumor response. Although the result was not statistically significant, a greater proportion of patients receiving the combined treatment achieved a clinically important difference for all QoL questionnaires. Also, there was a positive correlation between higher QoL scores and tumor response in the combination arm, compared to capecitabine alone (p = 0.02 to 0.07). These data suggest that lapatinib and capecitabine is a regimen that has clinical benefit and a positive impact on patients’ quality of life.

Lapatinib efficacy studies

Lapatinib as monotherapy

The efficacy of single agent lapatinib as second-line therapy in advanced/metastatic breast cancer has been studied in a number of trials (). An open-label single arm phase II study in patients with advanced or metastatic HER-2 positive breast cancer that had progressed on prior trastuzumab-containing regimens (EGF20002) showed an overall response rate of 5.1% (4/78) (GlaxoSmithKline). A phase II study (EGF20008) examined the safety and efficacy of lapatinib monotherapy in chemotherapy-refractory tumors (CitationBurstein et al 2008). This study included 2 cohorts of patients, HER-2 positive (Cohort A, n = 140) and HER-2 negative (Cohort B, n = 89). More than 95% of patients had stage IV disease, and nearly all patients had received 3 or more lines of anti-cancer therapy previously. Ninety-seven percent of HER-2 positive patients had received at least 12 weeks of prior trastuzumab therapy. Lapatinib 1500 mg daily was administered, with dose reduction to 1250 mg in the event of grade 3/4 toxicity. The best response was observed in the HER-2 positive cohort. There was an overall response rate of 1.4% (0.2%–5.1%) in the HER-2 positive cohort and 0.0% (0.0%–4.1%) in the HER-2 negative cohort. The independent review reported that 5.7% of HER-2 positive patients received a clinical benefit (CB), but there was no CB in the HER-2 negative group. Median overall survival was 29.4 weeks (cohort A) versus 18.6 weeks (cohort B). These responses were modest, but this was a heavily pretreated cohort. A similar phase II study of lapatinib monotherapy (1500 mg daily) in 67 Japanese patients with refractory positive advanced/metastatic breast cancer (EGF100642) demonstrated a much greater benefit in the HER-2 positive subgroup (response rate 24% vs 5%) (CitationToi et al 2007). While the trend for benefit in the HER-2 positive cohorts in these studies is the same, the reasons for a greater response rate in the Japanese study are unclear.

Table 3 Phase II trials with lapatinib (GW572016) monotherapy in advanced/metastatic breast cancer

A phase II open-label, two stage, study of lapatinib monotherapy in patients with inflammatory breast cancer (IBC) has also been initiated (EGF103009). IBC is a particularly aggressive form of breast cancer, and is associated with a poor prognosis (CitationChang et al 1998). Initially, patients were recruited in two cohorts of IBC (A) HER-2 positive (n = 32) and (B) EGFR positive/HER-2 negative (n = 15), which had progressed on prior chemotherapy or trastuzumab. The patients were treated with lapatinib (1500 mg daily) and response was measured by RECIST and skin biopsies. A 50% response rate was observed in the initial cohort of HER-2 positive patients, and this cohort was expanded to include 126 patients. There was one partial response (PR) among the 15 patients in the EGFR positive/HER-2 negative cohort, and enrolment in this arm was closed (CitationJohnston et al 2008; CitationKaufman et al 2008). Preliminary analysis of the expanded HER-2 positive arm shows an approximately 40% response rate, and subgroup analysis of trastuzumab-refractory tumors shows an approximately 50% response (CitationKaufman et al 2008). These results suggest that lapatinib monotherapy is active in the treatment of relapsed/refractory HER-2 positive IBC.

A phase II study (EGF20009) assessed the clinical activity and safety of lapatinib as a first line treatment in locally advanced or metastatic HER-2 positive breast cancer without prior HER-2-targeted therapy. The overall response rate was 24% (n = 138) and did not differ significantly between the two dosage groups (1500 mg daily or 500 mg twice daily). The median duration of response was 28.4 weeks, and progression free survival was 63% at 4 months, and 43% at 6 months (CitationGomez et al 2008). This trial suggests a role for first-line lapatinib therapy in locally advanced or metastatic HER-2 positive breast cancer.

It has been noted that patients with trastuzumab-treated HER-2 positive breast cancer tend to have a higher incidence of CNS relapse (CitationBendell et al 2003). This may in part be due to the limited ability of trastuzumab to cross the BBB (CitationPestalozzi and Brignoli 2000). In EGF20009, 6 patients with stable CNS disease involvement were enrolled. One patient had CNS relapse only, 3 patients had systemic relapse only, 1 patient died before objective assessment, and 1 remained relapse free at the time of discontinuation of treatment. In theory, lapatinib has a greater ability to cross the BBB, although pharmacokinetic studies have shown low CNS levels of the drug in normal healthy animals (CitationPolli et al 2008).

EGF105084 specifically studied the use of lapatinib monotherapy (750 mg twice daily) for brain metastases in HER-2 positive breast cancer with prior trastuzumab therapy (n = 39). Preliminary results of this phase II trial have reported an overall CNS response rate of 2.6% (1 PR), 6 patients with stable disease (15.4%) and 7 patients with progression free survival (18%) at 16 weeks (CitationLin et al 2008a). There were 4 non-CNS PRs. An association between tumor volume reduction, and physician-reported neurological signs and symptoms has also been observed (CitationLin et al 2008b). An extension arm to EGF105084 for patients with progression of disease allowed the patients to be offered lapatinib 1250 mg daily + capecitabine 2000 mg/m2/day. Of the 40 patients enrolled to this arm (as of March 2007), 20% had ≥50% tumor volume reduction (median absolute reduction 6.2 cm3), and 40% had ≥20% reduction (median 3.9 cm3) (CitationLin et al 2007). These early data suggest that the combination of lapatinib and capecitabine may be of benefit in patients whose CNS disease has progressed on monotherapy with lapatinib.

Lapatinib in combination with chemotherapy

The combination of a lapatinib analogue (GW282974X) with the capecitabine metabolite 5’-deoxy-5-fluorouridine was synergistic in vitro in breast cancer cell lines (CitationBudman et al 2006). A phase I study (EGF10005) found the optimal tolerated regimen for the combination to be 1250 mg lapatinib daily and 2000 mg/m2/day capecitabine on days 1 to 14 of a 21-day cycle. Four confirmed responses from 45 patients were reported, including 2 breast malignancies (1 complete response and 1 partial response) (CitationChu et al 2007). The complete response occurred in a patient that had disease progression while receiving trastuzumab.

An open-label phase III randomized clinical trial (EGF100151) proceeded on the basis of these encouraging data. A total of 399 patients with locally advanced or metastatic HER-2 positive breast cancer who had progressed after treatments including trastuzumab, anthracyclines, and taxanes were randomized to receive the combination of lapatinib and capecitabine versus capecitabine alone (). The primary study endpoint was time to disease progression (TTP). An interim analysis was reported in 2006 with 324 patients (CitationGeyer et al 2006), which showed a significantly reduced TTP in the combination arm (median 8.4 months vs 4.4 months in the monotherapy arm; hazard ratio [HR] 0.49; 95% CI 0.34 – 0.71; p > 0.001). A reduction in the number of patients who developed CNS disease in the combination arm in comparison to the monotherapy arm was also reported, although the difference was not significant. As a result of the increased benefit with the combination therapy, accrual was discontinued, and cross-over was offered to those on the monotherapy arm. Seventy-five more patients were included in the updated analyses which have recently been published (CitationCameron et al 2008). TTP remains highly significant (6.2 months vs 4.3 months; HR 0.57 (95% CI, 0.43–0.77; p > 0.001). There has been 1 complete response (CR) (> 1%) in the combination arm, vs 0 (0%) in the monotherapy arm. The odds ratio for overall response was 1.9, (95% CI, 1.1–3.4, p = 0.017). The decreased incidence of CNS metastases with lapatinib therapy was statistically significant in this analysis (p = 0.045). These data strongly suggest a benefit for the combination of lapatinib and capecitabine over capecitabine alone in patients with advanced or metastatic HER-2 positive breast cancer that have progressed on other treatments. Lapatinib, combined with capecitabine, has been licensed for use in the US in refractory HER-2 positive metastatic breast cancer on the basis of the EGF100151 data.

Table 4 Completed phase II/III combination trials with lapatinib (GW572016) for advanced/metastatic breast cancer

Taxane-based chemotherapy has been a mainstay of breast cancer treatment in the adjuvant and metastatic settings for a generation. The efficacy and safety of lapatinib and 3-weekly paclitaxel was established in a phase I study (EGF10009) (CitationJones et al 2004). The combination of lapatinib and weekly paclitaxel has shown efficacy in the phase II neoadjuvant setting for inflammatory breast cancer (EGF102580), with a response rate of 78.6% in the HER-2 positive subgroup (GlaxoSmithKline) (). A phase III, randomized study examined lapatinib combined with paclitaxel as first-line treatment for metastatic breast cancer, which was either HER-2 negative or has never been tested, (EGF30001) (CitationDi Leo et al 2007) (). In this double-blind study, 579 patients were randomized to receive paclitaxel (175 mg/m2) and either lapatinib (1500 mg daily; n = 293) or placebo (n = 286). The primary endpoint was to achieve a 40% increase in median TTP in the intention-to-treat population. Patient characteristics were well balanced between both groups. The overall response rate (35.1% vs 25.3%) was significant (odds ratio [OR] 1.7, p = 0.008). The clinical benefit rate was 40.5% versus 31.9% (OR = 1.5, p = 0.025). There was no significant difference between the two arms in TTP, or overall survival (CitationDi Leo et al 2007). However, significant differences emerged in the HER-2 positive and negative subgroup analyses. Of the samples tested in the combination arm (n = 291), 19% were HER-2 positive and 74% were HER-2 negative. The results were similar in the placebo arm (n = 288) (15% HER-2 positive vs 77% HER-2 negative). Importantly, there was a greater response rate in the HER-2 positive subpopulation in the combination arm of 60% versus 36% in the placebo arm (OR 2.9, p = 0.027). This contrasts with a non-significant increased response in the HER-2 negative patients (31% vs 24%, OR = 1.5, p = 0.118). The median duration of response was longer with the combination for the HER-2 positive patients (7.4 vs 5.5 months), while the median duration of response was less in the combination arm in HER-2 negative patients compared with paclitaxel alone (6.2 vs 8.5 months). A significant TTP was also seen in HER-2 positive patients (median 8.1 vs 5.8 months, p = 0.011). The interaction between HER-2 status and the combination treatment was significant by Cox’s proportional hazards model (p = 0.032). Similar results were found for event free survival. The addition of lapatinib to paclitaxel appears to be of benefit in certain breast cancer subpopulations, eg, HER-2 positive. Analysis is ongoing to refine this observation, eg, correlation of EGFR status and response. Two trials testing weekly paclitaxel and lapatinib in HER-2 positive advanced breast cancer are also underway (EGF104535, EGF105764). These will provide further efficacy data, and explore safety and tolerability issues raised by this study. A large phase III study comparing lapatinib or trastuzumab with taxanes is also planned (EGF108919).

The results of the phase II and this phase III trial, which included both HER-2 positive and HER-2 negative tumors, have shown efficacy of lapatinib in HER-2 positive breast cancer populations but no significant benefit in HER-2 negative patients. As a result the current focus of research for this drug is in HER-2 positive, rather than in HER-2 negative (EGFR positive) breast cancer.

Lapatinib in combination with hormone therapy

In an in vitro model of acquired resistance to lapatinib, acquired resistance was attributed to a switch in cell survival dependence from HER-2 alone to co-dependence upon ER and HER-2 (CitationXia et al 2006). Short-term exposure (14 days) to lapatinib also increased ER signaling in breast cancer patients. These findings provided the rationale for developing clinical trials of hormone therapies with lapatinib in HER-2 positive, ER positive breast cancer. There is also evidence that lapatinib can overcome hormone resistance, caused by cross-talk between HER-2 and ER, in preclinical models (CitationChu et al 2005). A phase III study of lapatinib combined with letrozole versus letrozole alone in post-menopausal women with estrogen-receptor positive metastatic breast cancer is currently ongoing. Patients are randomized to letrozole with or without lapatinib regardless of HER-2 status to test that hypothesis that lapatinib treatment may prevent the conversion of ER positive/HER-2 negative to ER positive/HER-2 positive breast cancer, thus blocking the development of resistance to endocrine therapy (CitationChowdhury et al 2007). Two phase II trials in hormone-resistant, ER positive metastatic breast cancer are currently examining lapatinib as single agent (NCT00225758) or in combination with tamoxifen (NCT00118157).

Lapatinib as neoadjuvant therapy

The potential role of lapatinib as neoadjuvant therapy in HER-2 positive locally advanced breast cancer is currently being evaluated. A phase II study reported promising results for the combination of lapatinib and paclitaxel as neoadjuvant therapy in newly diagnosed inflammatory breast cancer (EGF102580). The combined clinical response rate was 78.6% in the HER-2 positive cohort and 71.4% in the HER-2 negative/EGFR positive cohort (GlaxoSmithKline). These preliminary data suggest potential activity of the combination in these populations. A phase II study with lapatinib monotherapy is currently recruiting (www.clinicaltrials.gov, NCT00206427) and a phase I/II study of lapatinib and docetaxel with or without combination chemotherapy is underway (EORTC-10054).

Lapatinib in combination with other targeted agents

The safety and efficacy of lapatinib as monotherapy and in combination with chemotherapy is being recognized. Novel approaches of dual HER-2 targeting, and of combining lapatinib with anti-vascular agents are being investigated.

The combination of lapatinib and trastuzumab enhances apoptosis in HER-2 over-expressing breast cancer cell lines (CitationXia et al 2005). The optimal tolerated dose of lapatinib and trastuzumab, a monoclonal antibody against HER-2, was determined in a phase I study (EGF10023) (CitationStorniolo et al 2008). Interestingly, in this population of heavily pretreated HER-2 positive advanced breast cancers, there was a 16% overall response rate. Consequently, there has been a phase III trial (EGF104900), comparing the effect of lapatinib (1500 mg) alone to the combination of lapatinib (1000 mg) and trastuzumab, in metastatic HER-2 positive breast cancer which has progressed on prior anthracyclines, taxanes, and trastuzumab therapy (n = 296) (). The combination demonstrated significantly improved progression-free survival (12 weeks vs 8.4 weeks, OR 0.77, p = 0.029) and had a similar side-effect profile compared with lapatinib alone. One death was related to cardiac toxicity in the combination arm. Asymptomatic decrease in left ventricular ejection fraction was also more common in the combination arm (5% vs 2%). In summary, the data show that combined HER-2 targeting showed better clinical outcomes in comparison with lapatinib alone, in the pretreated metastatic setting, with a similar side-effect profile (CitationO'Shaughnessy et al 2008).

Ongoing trials involving lapatinib and trastuzumab include a phase III trial comparing paclitaxel and trastuzumab with lapatinib or placebo in HER-2 positive metastatic breast cancer (EGF104383), and a phase I study combining lapatinib, trastuzumab, carboplatin and paclitaxel (EGF103892).

Bevacizumab is a monoclonal antibody against VEGF, and has shown promising activity in combination with trastuzumab in preclinical models (CitationEmlet et al 2007). However, the cardiac toxicity profile of this combination has not been established. HER-2 inhibition with lapatinib may be a less cardiotoxic alternative. A phase II single arm trial is evaluating the combination of lapatinib (1500 mg daily) and bevacizumab (10 mg/kg iv q2wk) in 50 patients with HER-2 positive metastatic breast cancer. Preliminary data report a 12 week progression-free survival of 62% in 16 of 21 patients evaluated (3 partial response, 10 stable disease, 3 progressive disease), and the combination is well tolerated (CitationRugo et al 2008).

A phase II evaluation of lapatinib combined with the anti-angiogenic tyrosine kinase inhibitor pazopanib, versus lapatinib alone (VEG20007) is ongoing in patients who have not received prior treatment for their progressive disease. Preliminary reports show a 44% versus 30% response rate for the combination arm, with a 73% versus 43% reduction in target lesions at 12 weeks (CitationSlamon et al 2008).

Biomarkers of response to lapatinib

Similar to trastuzumab treatment, over-expression of HER-2 appears to be the most reliable predictive marker of response to lapatinib in breast cancer. Within the HER-2 positive breast cancer population additional biomarkers will be needed to further define the patients who are likely to benefit from lapatinib treatment.

Biomarkers of response to lapatinib monotherapy were investigated in the phase I study EGF10004 (CitationSpector et al 2005). Although the numbers were limited, clinical response was associated with increased pretreatment expression of HER-2, p-HER-2, Erk1/2, p-Erk1/2, insulin-like growth factor receptor-1, p70 S6 kinase, and transforming growth factor alpha compared with non-responders. Baseline EGFR expression did not correlate with response. HER-2 overexpression predicted response to lapatinib in the monotherapy phase II study EGF20009 (CitationGomez et al 2007), the phase I lapatinib/capecitabine study EGF100151 (CitationCameron et al 2008), and the phase III lapatinib/paclitaxel study EGF30001 (CitationPress et al 2008). CitationPress et al (2008) also reported than the benefit from lapatinib in HER-2 positive metastatic breast cancer may be limited to patients with FISH positive or immunohistochemical 3+ staining intensity.

The extracellular domain (ECD) of HER-2 is cleaved by ADAM protease enzymes (CitationLiu et al 2006) and can readily be detected in the serum of HER-2 positive breast cancer patients. After cleavage of the ECD, the remaining p95 form of HER-2 retains kinase activity. This form of HER-2 has been associated with resistance to trastuzumab treatment but is inhibited by lapatinib (CitationScaltriti et al 2007). Increased pre-treatment levels of serum HER-2 ECD correlate positively with response to lapatinib, and decreasing levels during treatment are associated with clinical benefit in HER-2 positive metastatic breast cancer (CitationLipton et al 2007). However, response to lapatinib appeared to be independent of baseline HER-2 ECD levels in the pivotal phase III capecitabine/lapatinib trial (EGF100151) (CitationCameron et al 2008). High baseline levels of HER-2 ECD in HER-2 negative metastatic breast cancer did not predict response to lapatinib and paclitaxel or paclitaxel alone (CitationFinn et al 2008). Neither EGFR expression nor baseline EGFR ECD levels affected progression free survival in the capecitabine/ lapatinib trial (EGF100151) (CitationCameron et al 2008).

In the phase I monotherapy study EGF10004, inhibition of phosphorylated AKT and MAPK (downstream targets of HER-2 and EGFR) at day 21 were also associated with clinical responses (CitationSpector et al 2005). Loss of PTEN expression (a negative regulator of AKT), which has been associated with resistance to trastuzumab treatment does not appear to preclude response to lapatinib in patients with inflammatory breast cancer (CitationXia et al 2007). Phosphorylation of p70 S6 kinase, a downstream target of mTOR (mammalian target of rapamycin), has also been reported as a potential biomarker for lapatinib activity in human breast cancer cell lines (CitationVazquez-Martin et al 2008).

Forkhead box group O transcriptional factor (FoxO3A) is a downstream target of the PI3 kinase pathway, which regulates cell proliferation, survival, and malignant transformation. FoxO3A has previously been shown as a direct target of EGFR inhibitors, including lapatinib, in two sensitive HER-2 positive breast cancer cell lines, BT474 and SKBR3 (CitationKrol et al 2007). Gene array data from EGF100151 suggested that elevated baseline FoxO3A mRNA levels and reduced BCL-2 mRNA correlated with response to the combination of lapatinib and capecitabine (CitationCrown et al 2007).

Conclusions

Although lapatinib is a dual inhibitor of EGFR and HER-2, it is clearly evident from trials including both HER-2 positive and HER-2 negative breast cancer patients, that the benefits of lapatinib treatment are largely restricted to HER-2 positive breast cancer. Lapatinib has shown activity in trastuzumab-refractory HER-2 positive breast cancer and at present is approved, in combination with capecitabine, for treatment of refractory HER-2 positive metastatic breast cancer. Recent trial results suggest that combined trastuzumab and lapatinib treatment show greater efficacy than lapatinib alone in trastuzumab-refractory metastatic breast cancer. Lapatinib has also shown promising activity as first-line treatment for HER-2 positive metastatic breast cancer and the results of ongoing phase III trials will help to define the role of lapatinib in this setting. Lapatinib may also have a specific role for treatment HER-2 positive breast cancer patients with CNS metastases. Due to the apparent lack of cardiotoxicity, lapatinib may also have benefits in combination therapy with anthracyclines. A phase I study of lapatinib with epirubicin is currently underway to determine the safe dose of epirubicin in combination with lapatinib and to examine the cardiotoxicity of this combination. Several large randomized clinical trials are also underway at present to evaluate the benefits of lapatinib treatment for early stage breast cancer.

Acknowledgments

BC and JC are funded by a Health Research Board Clinician Scientist Award.

Disclosures

JC has received speaker fees and research support from GlaxoSmithKline.

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