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Navigating Treatment Sequencing in HER2+ Metastatic Breast Cancer: Evidence-Based Approaches - Episode 10

Clinical Insights Into Managing Heavily Pretreated HER2+  Metastatic Breast Cancer

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Panelists discuss how they approach treatment beyond third-line therapy for HER2-positive (HER2+) metastatic breast cancer, considering factors such as prior therapies, residual toxicities, and patient preferences when selecting from multiple options.

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    Clinical Brief: Beyond Third-Line Therapy in HER2+ Metastatic Breast Cancer

    Key Themes:

    • Clinical Trial Priority: Enrollment in clinical trials is ideal for heavily pretreated patients
    • Fourth-Line Options: If the HER2CLIMB regimen is used in the third line, T-DM1 becomes a preferred fourth-line option
    • Personalized Selection Factors: Prior treatments, residual toxicities, and patient preferences guide therapy selection in later lines

    Key Points for Physicians:

    • Multiple guideline-supported options exist beyond the third line, including taxanes with trastuzumab, capecitabine with trastuzumab or lapatinib, margetuximab, and others
    • Consider residual toxicities when selecting later-line therapy (eg, avoid taxanes with significant neuropathy)
    • Limited clinical experience exists with sequential tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) use (eg, neratinib after tucatinib)
    • Novel agents in clinical trials include new antibody-drug conjugates and bispecific antibodies

    Notable Insights:

    • Decision-making becomes highly nuanced in later lines of therapy
    • Despite multiple theoretical options, some agents such as margetuximab have limited real-world adoption
    • The theoretical rationale for sequential TKI use based on specificity profiles has not been widely tested in practice

    Clinical Significance:

    Beyond third-line therapy for HER2+ metastatic breast cancer, treatment selection becomes increasingly individualized based on prior treatments, toxicity profiles, and patient preferences, with clinical trials offering the most promising opportunities for heavily pretreated patients.

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