MONARCH 1, A Phase II Study of Abemaciclib, a CDK4 and CDK6 Inhibitor, as a Single Agent, in Patients with Refractory HR+/HER2− Metastatic Breast Cancer
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center · Kettering University · +10 more institutions
Abstract
Patients (n = 132) had a median of 3 (range, 1–8) lines of prior systemic therapy in the metastatic setting, 90.2% had visceral disease, and 50.8% had ≥3 metastatic sites. At the 12-month final analysis, the primary objective of confirmed objective response rate was 19.7% (95% CI, 13.3–27.5; 15% not excluded); clinical benefit rate (CR+PR+SD≥6 months) was 42.4%, median progression-free survival was 6.0 months, and median overall survival was 17.7 months. The most common treatment-emergent AEs of any grade were diarrhea, fatigue, and nausea; discontinuations due to AEs were infrequent (7.6%).
In this poor-prognosis, heavily pretreated population with refractory HR+/HER2− metastatic breast cancer, continuous dosing of single-agent abemaciciclib was well tolerated and exhibited promising clinical activity. Clin Cancer Res; 23(17); 5218–24. ©2017 AACR.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 50.87
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 35
Authors
14- MNMaura N. DicklerCorresponding
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, Kettering University
- SMSara M. Tolaney
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
- HSHope S. Rugo
UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center
- JCJavier Cortés
Instituto Cajal, Hospital Universitario Ramón y Cajal, Vall d'Hebron Institute of Oncology
- VDVéronique Dièras
Institut Curie
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Metastatic breast cancer
- Internal medicine
- Breast cancer
- Phases of clinical research
- Adverse effect
- Refractory (planetary science)
- Oncology