Actively Recruiting
Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy With or Without GnRH Agonist for Premenopausal Triple-negative Early Breast Cancer Patients
Led by National Taiwan University Hospital · Updated on 2025-04-29
124
Participants Needed
1
Research Sites
327 weeks
Total Duration
On this page
Sponsors
N
National Taiwan University Hospital
Lead Sponsor
M
Ministry of Health and Welfare
Collaborating Sponsor
AI-Summary
What this Trial Is About
Breast cancer (BC), especially premenopausal, is emerging rapidly in East Asia in recent 20 years. Half of the breast cancer patients in Asia are younger than 50 years of age. In general, younger or premenopausal patients are associated with poorer prognosis. Premenopausal patients have higher estrogen levels than those in older (postmenopausal) patients. Estrogen is known to suppress anti-tumor T cell response and leading to tumor progression in different animal models (Clin Cancer Res 2016 22:6204), including lung cancer, melanoma, ovarian cancer. One of the mechanisms that contributes to estrogen's suppression of T cell function is via the mobilization of myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSC). Targeting ER signaling with hormonal therapy can abolish MDSC mobilization, and sensitize tumor cells to antigen specific T cell or NK cell killing (Cancer Discovery 2018 7:72 2017). These study results further support the hypothesis that, E2 is associated with immunosuppressive effect, and may contribute to the suppression of immune surveillance in young female breast cancer patients. These results suggest that E2 may suppress anti-tumor immunity, and E2 reduction improve the anti-tumor immunity. In our preliminary works, the investigators found higher dose (equivalent to premenopausal women serum level) of E2 suppressed T cell activities, while lower dose E2 (postmenopausal serum level) activated T cell activity. The investigators have investigated the combination of anti-PD1 antibody and GnRH agonist plus exemestane (an aromatase inhibitor which will block the production of E2 from adipose tissue) in ER positive premenopausal breast cancer patient refractory to prior endocrine therapy in metastatic setting. The response rate was 38.4%, and median progression-free survival (PFS) was 10.2 months. This outstanding result were presented in AACR 2021 oral session (Cancer Res 2021 81:13\_Supplement, CT028). On the other hand, progesterone is also well known for its anti-inflammation and immune tolerance activity. This possibly makes estrogen reduction treatments, such as gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist (GnRH agonist), an important partner in augmenting neoadjuvant therapy for patients with premenopausal breast cancer. For triple negative breast cancer (TNBC), endocrine therapy has no anti-tumor effect. On the other hand, the use of GnRH agonist has been tested for the protection of ovary function of young female while receiving adjuvant chemotherapy. Surprisingly, the concomitant use of goserelin and adjuvant chemotherapy improved disease-free survival (HR 0.47, P=0.04) and overall survival (HR 0.45, P=0.05) versus chemotherapy alone in ER negative premenopausal early BC patients in POEMS study, which was initially aimed to improve the success pregnant rate (N Engl J Med 2015 372;923). Endocrine therapy is theoretically antagonist to chemotherapy therapy when concomitantly use. In another report analyzed the outcome of both pre- and postmenopausal women who entered two randomized trials (Gruppo Oncologico Nord-Ovest-Mammella Intergruppo studies) on adjuvant chemotherapy and received either concomitant or sequential hormonal therapy. The result showed a decreasing trend (P = 0.015) in hazard ratio of death with increasing age was observed, indicating that concomitant therapy is more effective than sequential therapy in young patients (Annals of Oncology 2008;19(2):299-307). These results support the hypothesis that, E2 suppression/ER inhibition therapy may modulate immune microenvironment, thereby enhancing the chemotherapy induced immunogenic death effect. The investigators hypothesized that, estrogen level reduction by ovarian function suppression can modulate immune microenvironment, thereby augmenting adjuvant chemotherapy efficacy, regardless of the estrogen receptor (ER) status of cancer cell. Therefore, the investigators plan to test this hypothesis in real clinical model, with standard clinical recommended treatment doses. The study is designed to evaluate whether the GnRH agonist can provide the therapeutic benefit for premenopausal TNBC patients via modulating immune microenvironment. Premenopausal TNBC patients will receive GnRH agonist and neoadjuvant chemotherapy, and the efficacy and immune microenvironment change of co-administration arm will be measured and compared with chemotherapy alone control arm.
CONDITIONS
Official Title
Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy With or Without GnRH Agonist for Premenopausal Triple-negative Early Breast Cancer Patients
Who Can Participate
Eligibility Criteria
You may qualify if you...
- Female patients aged 18 years or older
- Premenopausal status confirmed by serum estrogen (E2) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) levels
- Histologically confirmed triple-negative breast cancer or hormone receptor-low/HER2-negative breast cancer as defined by ASCO/CAP guidelines
- Locally advanced non-metastatic (M0) TNBC or hormone receptor-low/HER2-negative with specific tumor and lymph node staging (T1c-T4a-d, N0-N2)
- Agree to core needle biopsy for research purposes
- Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status 0-1
- Adequate organ and marrow function within 14 days before randomization, including defined blood counts and organ function tests
- Planned breast cancer surgery
- Negative pregnancy test within 3 days before starting therapy and not breastfeeding
- Use of effective contraception before and during the study and for 6 months after therapy completion
- Ability to comply with study procedures and provide written informed consent
You will not qualify if you...
- Prior therapy for breast cancer including surgery, radiotherapy, chemotherapy, immunotherapy, or hormone therapy
- Evidence of systemic metastasis
- Pregnancy or lactation
- History of invasive malignancy within 5 years except certain treated skin or cervical cancers
- Active autoimmune disease requiring systemic treatment in past 2 years (except hydroxychloroquine) if planning pembrolizumab use
- Diagnosis of immunodeficiency or receiving high-dose systemic steroids (prednisolone >20 mg/day)
- Active systemic infection requiring therapy
- Psychiatric illness or social issues preventing study compliance
- Serious non-healing wound, ulcer, or bone fracture (except breast cancer related)
- Major surgery, open biopsy, or significant injury within 28 days before enrollment
- History of allergic reaction to study drugs or similar compounds
- Significant cardiac disease or arrhythmias, severe respiratory disease, severe liver impairment, or other medically unstable conditions
- Unable or unwilling to undergo serial breast tumor biopsies
- Hypersensitivity to any study drugs
AI-Screening
AI-Powered Screening
Complete this quick 3-step screening to check your eligibility
Trial Site Locations
Total: 1 location
1
National Taiwan University Hospital
Taipei, Taiwan, 100225
Actively Recruiting
Research Team
C
Chaio Lo, M.D.
CONTACT
Y
Yen-Shen Lu, Ph.D.
CONTACT
How is the study designed?
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Masking
NONE
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Model
PARALLEL
Primary Purpose
TREATMENT
Number of Arms
2
Not the Right Trial for You?
Explore thousands of other clinical trials that might be a better match.
Sign up to get personalized trial recommendations delivered to your inbox.
Already have an account? Log in here