Pertuzumab

Pertuzumab
The structure of HER2 and pertuzumab
Monoclonal antibody
TypeWhole antibody
SourceHumanized (from mouse)
TargetHER2
Names
Trade namesPerjeta
Clinical data
Drug classMonoclonal antibody[1]
Main usesBreast cancer[1]
Side effectsDiarrhea, hair loss, low neutrophils, nausea, tiredness, rash, peripheral nerve problems[1]
WHO AWaReUnlinkedWikibase error: ⧼unlinkedwikibase-error-statements-entity-not-set⧽
Pregnancy
category
  • US: D (Evidence of risk)
    Routes of
    use
    Intravenous
    External links
    AHFS/Drugs.comMonograph
    Legal
    License data
    Legal status

    Pertuzumab, sold under the brand name Perjeta, is a medication used to treat breast cancer.[1] Specifically it is used for HER2-positive cases in combination with trastuzumab and possibly docetaxel.[1] It is given by gradual injection into a vein.[1]

    Common side effects include diarrhea, hair loss, low neutrophils, nausea, tiredness, rash, and peripheral nerve problems.[1] Other side effects may include heart failure, infusion reaction, and anaphylaxis.[2] Use during pregnancy may harm the baby.[2] It is a monoclonal antibody which attaches to HER2 on cells and blocks signals that cause the cancer to grow.[3]

    Pertuzumab was approved for medical use in the United States in 2012 and Europe in 2013.[2][3] In the United Kingdom it costs the NHS about £2,400 per 420 mg as of 2021.[4] This amount in the United States costs about 5,800 USD.[5]

    Medical uses

    Pertuzumab is administered as an intravenous infusion in combination with trastuzumab and docetaxel as a first line treatment for HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer.[6][7] It is also used in the same combination as a neoadjuvant (given to reduce the size of a tumor, prior to surgery or radiation) for HER2-positive early breast cancer; as of 2016 this use had not been shown to increase survival.[6]

    As of 2016 pertuzumab had not been studied in people with a left ventricular ejection fraction value of ≤ 50% normal, a prior history of congestive heart failure, or conditions that could impair left ventricular function like uncontrolled hypertension, recent heart attacks, or serious cardiac arrhythmia.[7] Caution should be used combining pertuzumab with an anthracycline.[7] There is also no safety data available for use of pertuzumab in combination with doxorubicin.[7]

    Women of child-bearing age should use contraception while taking pertuzumab; it may damage the fetus in pregnant women, and it may be secreted in breast milk.[7]

    Dosage

    It is given as an initial dose of 840 mg followed by 420 mg every three weeks.[3]

    Side effects

    In clinical trials of the three-agent combination therapy in metastatic breast cancer, adverse effects occurring in more than half the people taking it included diarrhea, hair loss, and loss of neutrophils; more than 10% of people experienced loss of neutrophils with fever, and loss of leukocytes.[7] After docetaxel was dropped in some people, the most common adverse effects were diarrhea (28.1%), upper respiratory tract infection (18.3%), rash (18.3%), headache (17.0%), fatigue (13.4%), swelling of nasal passages and throat (often due to catching the common cold) (17.0%), weakness (13.4%), itchiness (13.7%), joint pain (11.4%), nausea (12.7%), pain in an extremity (13.4%), back pain (12.1%) and cough (12.1%).[7]

    In clinical trials of the neoadjuvant use of the combination, more than 50% of people had hair loss and loss of neutrophils.[7]

    In both uses, more than 10% of people additionally experienced: loss of red blood cells, hypersensitivity or allergic reaction, infusion reactions, decreased appetite, insomnia, distortions in the sense of taste, inflammation of the mouth or lips, constipation, rashes, nail disease, and muscle pain.[7]

    Pharmacology

    The metabolism of pertuzumab has not been directly studied; in general antibodies are cleared principally by catabolism. The median clearance of pertuzumab was 0.235 liters/day and the median half-life was 18 days.[7]

    Mechanism of action

    HER2 is an extracellular receptor—a receptor tyrosine kinase - that when activated, sets off signal transduction through several pathways that stimulate cell proliferation and cell growth; if overexpressed it can cause uncontrollable growth. HER2 positive breast cancer is caused by ERBB2 gene amplification that results in overexpression of HER2 in approximately 15-30% of breast cancer tumors.[8]

    Like many receptors HER2 normally combines another protein in order to function (a process called dimerization); it can bind with a second HER2 receptor (acting as a homodimer) and it can heterodimerize with a different receptor of the HER family. The most potent dimer for activating signalling pathways is HER2/HER3.[9]

    The epitope for pertuzumab is the domain of HER2 where it binds to HER3, and pertuzumab prevents the HER2/HER3 dimer from forming, which blocks signalling by the dimer.[9][10] Trastuzumab is another monoclonal antibody against HER2; its epitope is the domain where HER2 binds to another HER2 protein.[9] The two mAbs together prevent HER2 from functioning.[9]

    Chemistry

    Pertuzumab is an immunoglobulin G1 with a variable region against the human HER2 protein, a human-mouse monoclonal 2C4 heavy chain, disulfide bound with a human-mouse monoclonal 2C4 κ-chain.[11]

    It is manufactured recombinantly in CHO cells.[6]

    History

    It was discovered and developed by Genentech, a subsidiary of Roche.[12][13]

    The monoclonal antibody 2C4 appears to have first been published in 1990 by scientists from Genentech,[14] the same year that F. Hoffmann-La Roche AG acquired a majority stake in Genentech.[15]

    By 2003 Genentech understood that 2C4 prevented HER2 dimerizing with other HER receptors and had begun Phase I trials, aiming for a broad range of cancers, not just ones overexpressing HER2. It was the first known HER dimerization inhibitor.[16]

    In 2005 Genentech presented poor results of Phase II trials of pertuzumab as a single agent in prostate, breast, and ovarian cancers, and said that it intended to continue developing it in combination with other drugs for ovarian cancer.[17][18]

    In 2007 Genentech dropped the trade name Omnitarg.[19][20]

    In March 2009 Roche acquired Genentech by buying shares it didn't already control.[21][22]

    In 2012 the results were published of the CLEOPATRA trial, a randomized placebo-controlled Phase III trial of pertuzumab in combination with trastuzumab and docetaxel in HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer.[23] Pertuzumab received US FDA approval for the treatment of HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer later that year.[13] Results of a Phase II trial in the neoadjuvant setting, NeoSphere, published in 2012[24] and results of a Phase II cardiac safety study in the same population, Tryphaena, published in 2013.[25] The FDA approved the neoadjuvant indication in 2013.[26]

    Pertuzumab was approved in Europe in 2013.[7]

    Pertuzumab had also been studied in Non-small cell lung cancer but as of 2016 that indication had been discontinued.[12]

    Society and culture

    As of 2016, in the US each cycle of the three-drug combination given every three weeks costs around $8,500, not including ancillary care costs.[27]

    In the UK, a NICE evaluation in 2015 made a preliminary finding that the drug combination was not cost effective, and NICE rejected the drug in the neoadjuvant setting in May 2016, primarily because it was unknown if the drug combination provided a survival benefit.[28][29][30] This decision was subsequently reversed six months later and pertuzumab became the first new breast cancer drug to be approved by NICE for routine NHS funding in almost a decade after Roche pledged to provide the drug to the NHS at an undisclosed discount for patients in the neoadjuvant setting and to share the long–term financial risks.[31]

    References

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