This prospective, response-guided phase II study investigates individualized neoadjuvant treatment strategies for patients with human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)-positive early breast cancer. After receiving neoadjuvant dual-HER2-targeted therapy with chemotherapy, patients are evaluated for their treatment response. Those achieving an adequate response continue the therapy, whereas patients with a suboptimal response transition to an intensified investigational regimen incorporating novel targeted agents. This adaptive approach aims to optimize pathologic response, minimize unnecessary toxicity, and explore more effective treatment options for individuals with insufficient benefit from conventional neoadjuvant therapy.
This is a prospective, response-guided, phase II study designed to evaluate individualized neoadjuvant treatment strategies in patients with HER2-positive early breast cancer. The study incorporates an adaptive treatment algorithm based on early response assessment to an initial neoadjuvant dual HER2-targeted therapy combined with chemotherapy, with the aim of optimizing therapeutic efficacy while minimizing unnecessary treatment-related toxicity. All eligible patients initially receive neoadjuvant dual HER2-targeted therapy combined with chemotherapy according to the study protocol. Following completion of a predefined initial treatment phase, tumor response is systematically assessed using standardized clinical and radiologic criteria. Patients who achieve an adequate response continue the same neoadjuvant treatment to complete the planned course of therapy. In contrast, patients demonstrating a suboptimal response are assigned to an intensified investigational neoadjuvant strategy. The escalation regimens include either trastuzumab-rezetecan in combination with pertuzumab or a pyrotinib-based multi-agent regimen incorporating chemotherapy and HER2-directed therapy. Treatment selection and administration follow protocol-specified criteria and schedules. The response-guided escalation strategy is intended to address the unmet clinical need of patients who derive insufficient benefit from standard neoadjuvant dual HER2-targeted therapy combined with chemotherapy. By selectively intensifying treatment only in patients with suboptimal response, this study seeks to enhance pathologic response rates while avoiding overtreatment in patients who respond adequately to initial therapy. Primary and secondary objectives focus on evaluating pathologic response outcomes, safety and tolerability of the adaptive treatment strategies, and feasibility of response-guided treatment modification in the neoadjuvant setting. Exploratory analyses will assess potential biomarkers associated with treatment response and resistance, providing insights to inform future personalized neoadjuvant treatment approaches in HER2-positive early breast cancer.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
200
Nab paclitaxel
carboplatin
trastuzumab
pertuzumab
a HER2-targeted antibody-drug conjugate (ADC)
Pyrotinib: an oral irreversible pan-HER tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI).
2nd Affiliated Hospital, School of Medicine, Zhejiang University
Hangzhou, China
RECRUITINGTotal Pathological Complete Response (tpCR) Rate: ypT0/Tis, ypN0
The tpCR rate is defined as the proportion of participants with no residual invasive cancer cells in both the breast primary tumor site (residual in situ cancer cells are permitted) and all sampled axillary lymph nodes.
Time frame: 18 weeks
Breast Pathological Complete Response (bpCR) Rate: ypT0/Tis
The bpCR rate is defined as the proportion of participants with no residual invasive cancer cells in the breast primary tumor site (residual in situ cancer cells are permitted).
Time frame: 18 weeks
Objective Response Rate (ORR)
ORR is defined as the proportion of participants with a complete or partial response.
Time frame: 18 weeks
Event-Free Survival (EFS)
EFS is defined as the time from randomization to any of the following events: precludes surgery, local or distant recurrence, second primary malignancy, or death due to any cause.
Time frame: Approximately five years
Adverse Event (AE)
An AE is defined as any untoward medical occurrence in a study participant administered a medicinal product, temporally associated with study intervention, without presumption of causality.
Time frame: Approximately three years
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