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.