Endocrine Oncology (Jan 2023)

SAKK 21/12: a phase II trial of transdermal CR1447 in breast cancer patients

  • Marcus Vetter,
  • Karin M Rothgiesser,
  • Qiyu Li,
  • Hanne Hawle,
  • Wolfgang Schönfeld,
  • Karin Ribi,
  • Salome Riniker,
  • Roger von Moos,
  • Andreas Trojan,
  • Elena Kralidis,
  • Mathias Fehr,
  • Andreas Müller,
  • Beat Thürlimann

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1530/EO-21-0009
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 1
pp. 9 – 18

Abstract

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Objective: CR1447, a novel transdermal formulation of 4-hydroxytestosterone, has aromatase-inhibiting and androgen receptor (AR)-modulating properties (IC50 4.4 nM) with antitumor effects against AR-positive tumor cells in vitro. This trial investigated the efficacy and safety of CR1447 for patients with metastatic estrogen receptor-positive (A) and AR-positive triple-negative breast cancers (B). Design and methods: (A) included patients with at most one prior endocrine therapy line without progression ≥6 months, whereas (B) included patients with ≤2 prior chemotherapy lines, all displaying advanced signs of disease. The primary endpoint was disease control at week 24 (DC24). The null hypothesis was DC24 ≤30% (A) and ≤15% (B). Thirty-seven patients were recruited (29 in (A) and 8 in (B)); accrual was stopped following an interim analysis demonstrating futility in (A) and slow accrual in (B). Results: DC24 was attained in 5/21 (95% CI: 8.2–47.2) patients in (A) and none in (B). The median progression-free survival was 5.1 months (95% CI: 2.5–5.6) in (A) and 2.5 months (95% CI: 0.7–2.6) in (B). The median overall survival was 24.6 months (95% CI: 22.9–not applicable) in (A) and 10.8 months (95% CI: 3.3–10.9) in (B). CR1447 had a favorable safety profile without treatment-related grade 3–5 toxicities in (A). Especially no side effects linked to androgenic effects were observed. Conclusions: Despite this trial being negative, the 24% DC24 rate in a second-line setting, and the prolonged partial response experienced by a patient, indicate activity. Further evaluation of CR1447 in endocrine-sensitive patients or combination trials appears warranted.

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