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Navigating Treatment Sequencing in HER2+ Metastatic Breast Cancer: Evidence-Based Approaches - Episode 6

Clinical Insights on the Next Treatment Approach for Metastatic HER2+  Breast Cancer with Brain Metastasis

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Panelists discuss how they would approach multiple brain metastases at initial metastatic diagnosis, debating the use of stereotactic radiosurgery vs systemic therapy with agents that cross the blood-brain barrier.

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    Clinical Brief: Case Presentation – HER2-Positive Disease with Brain Metastases

    Key Themes:

    • Case Presentation: 47-year-old with initially early-stage HER2-positive/hormone receptor–negative (HER2+/HR–) breast cancer who developed brain metastases along with systemic disease 12 months after completing adjuvant therapy
    • Treatment Approach: Patient received stereotactic radiosurgery for brain metastases followed by paclitaxel, trastuzumab, and pertuzumab, then trastuzumab deruxtecan (T-DXd) upon progression
    • Management of Treatment Complications: Patient developed grade 1 interstitial lung disease with T-DXd; treatment was interrupted until resolution, then resumed

    Key Points for Physicians:

    • HER2+/HR– disease may have a higher risk of central nervous system (CNS) recurrence than HR+ disease
    • Treatment sequencing typically includes local therapy for symptomatic brain metastases followed by systemic therapy
    • The HER2CLIMB regimen (tucatinib, capecitabine, trastuzumab) is appropriate after progression on T-DXd, especially with brain metastases

    Notable Insights:

    • Despite being low risk (stage I, node negative), the patient relapsed quickly with extensive metastatic disease including brain involvement
    • The case highlights the value of multidisciplinary discussion for patients with brain metastases
    • Different radiation oncologists may have varying approaches to brain metastases––some prefer up front SRS while others favor systemic therapy with CNS activity

    Clinical Significance:

    Management of HER2+ breast cancer with brain metastases requires a multidisciplinary approach. Increasing evidence supports systemic therapies with CNS activity as important components of treatment, potentially changing the traditional paradigm of local therapy followed by systemic treatment.

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