Research presented at the 2017 Annual Meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) shows that CT-P6, a proposed trastuzumab biosimilar, is safe and effective as a neoadjuvant treatment in HER2–positive early breast cancer.
Research presented at the 2017 Annual Meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) shows that CT-P6, a proposed trastuzumab biosimilar, is safe and effective as a neoadjuvant treatment in human epidermal growth factor receptor 2—positive (HER2–positive) early breast cancer (EBC).
CT-P6, a recombinant humanized monoclonal antibody that targets HER2 approved by the Ministry of Food and Drug Safety, a government body in Korea, has an identical amino acid sequence and highly similar physicochemical and in vitro functional properties to trastuzumab. A phase 1 trial demonstrated similar pharmacokinetics (PK), safety, and immunogenicity between the 2 products.
This double-blind, randomized, phase 3 study sought to demonstrate the therapeutic response equivalence of CT-P6 and its reference product as determined by the pathological complete response (pCR), defined as the absence of invasive cancer in the breast and axillary nodes, irrespective of ductal carcinoma in situ. Secondary objectives for the study included obtaining additional PK, pharmacodynamic, and safety data. The researchers also sought to evaluate additional efficacy parameters, including breast pCR (bpCR), defined as the absence of invasive cancer in the breast irrespective of ductal carcinoma in situ or nodal involvement; pCR without ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), defined as absence of invasive cancer and in situ cancer in the breast and axillary nodes; overall response rate (ORR); and breast conservation rate.
The researchers considered 549 female patients 18 years or older who had been diagnosed with HER2—positive EBC of clinical stage I to IIIa. The patients had generally balanced demographics and disease characteristics, and were randomized at 112 centers in 22 countries. The 2 groups were treated with CT-P6 (n = 271) or the reference trastuzumab (n = 278). Patients were treated with the biosimilar or the reference product, in combination with chemotherapy, as neoadjuvant treatment for 8 cycles, and for up to 1 year (or 10 cycles) of monotherapy as adjuvant treatment. Following neoadjuvant treatment, patients underwent surgery, when pathological response, PK, and immunogenicity were assessed.
The pre-defined therapeutic equivalence margin for the risk ratio was 0.74 to 1.35, and the margin for the risk difference was -15% to 15%. The researchers found, with a 95% confidence interval, that the treatment risk ratio for the per-protocol set (PPS) was 0.93 (range, 0.78 to 1.11), and the treatment difference estimate for the PPS was -3.62% (range, -12.38 to 5.16), both within the pre-defined equivalence margin. The proportion of pCR without DCIS and the bpCR were similar between the 2 treatment groups, as was ORR.
The study further found that serum concentrations of the treatment products, HER2-shed antigen levels, the proportion of patients who underwent breast conservation surgery, and rates of treatment emergent adverse events (with neutropenia, anemia, and leukopenia being the most commonly reported adverse events) were similar for the 2 groups during the neoadjuvant period. None of the patients developed anti-drug antibodies during the study.
While adjuvant period data will be generated in the future, the researchers concluded that:
Secondary efficacy endpoints, as well as the results of PK and pharmacodynamic analysis, further supported the similarity of the 2 products.
Biosimilar Market Development Requires Strategic Flexibility and Global Partnerships
April 29th 2025Thriving in the evolving biosimilar market demands bold collaboration, early global partnerships, and a fresh approach to development strategies to overcome uncertainty and drive future success.
Insights from Festival of Biologics: Dracey Poore Discusses Cardinal Health’s 2024 Biosimilar Report
May 19th 2024The discussion highlights key emerging trends from the Festival of Biologics conference and the annual Cardinal Health Biosimilars Report, including the importance of sustainability in the health care landscape and the challenges and successes in biosimilar adoption and affordability.
Addressing Patent Abuse, Reimbursement Models Key to Sustainable Biosimilar Market
April 25th 2025Sonia T. Oskouei, PharmD, emphasized strategies to streamline regulations and evolve to overcome barriers and expand the availability of cost-effective biosimilar treatments across more therapeutic areas.
What AmerisourceBergen's Report Reveals About Payers, Biosimilar Pricing Trends
May 28th 2023On this episode of Not So Different, Tasmina Hydery and Brian Biehn from AmerisourceBergen discussed results from a recent survey, that were also presented at Asembia 2023, diving into the payer perspective on biosimilars and current pricing trends across the US biosimilar industry.
Decade of Biosimilars Yields $36 Billion in Savings and Strengthens Supply Chain
April 24th 2025Dracey Poore, MS, director of biosimilars and emerging therapies at Cardinal Health, highlighted that biosimilars saved $36 billion over the last decade by improving patient access and the supply chain, but continued education and a robust pipeline are crucial for future growth.
Early Success of Adalimumab Biosimilars Featured at AMCP 2025
April 5th 2025High adherence rates, comparable clinical effectiveness, and cost savings have marked the early adoption of adalimumab biosimilars in the US, particularly in formulary-driven transitions, as shown in 2 retrospective studies presented at the Academy of Managed Care Pharmacy annual meeting (AMCP 2025).
Biosimilar Market Development Requires Strategic Flexibility and Global Partnerships
April 29th 2025Thriving in the evolving biosimilar market demands bold collaboration, early global partnerships, and a fresh approach to development strategies to overcome uncertainty and drive future success.
Insights from Festival of Biologics: Dracey Poore Discusses Cardinal Health’s 2024 Biosimilar Report
May 19th 2024The discussion highlights key emerging trends from the Festival of Biologics conference and the annual Cardinal Health Biosimilars Report, including the importance of sustainability in the health care landscape and the challenges and successes in biosimilar adoption and affordability.
Addressing Patent Abuse, Reimbursement Models Key to Sustainable Biosimilar Market
April 25th 2025Sonia T. Oskouei, PharmD, emphasized strategies to streamline regulations and evolve to overcome barriers and expand the availability of cost-effective biosimilar treatments across more therapeutic areas.
What AmerisourceBergen's Report Reveals About Payers, Biosimilar Pricing Trends
May 28th 2023On this episode of Not So Different, Tasmina Hydery and Brian Biehn from AmerisourceBergen discussed results from a recent survey, that were also presented at Asembia 2023, diving into the payer perspective on biosimilars and current pricing trends across the US biosimilar industry.
Decade of Biosimilars Yields $36 Billion in Savings and Strengthens Supply Chain
April 24th 2025Dracey Poore, MS, director of biosimilars and emerging therapies at Cardinal Health, highlighted that biosimilars saved $36 billion over the last decade by improving patient access and the supply chain, but continued education and a robust pipeline are crucial for future growth.
Early Success of Adalimumab Biosimilars Featured at AMCP 2025
April 5th 2025High adherence rates, comparable clinical effectiveness, and cost savings have marked the early adoption of adalimumab biosimilars in the US, particularly in formulary-driven transitions, as shown in 2 retrospective studies presented at the Academy of Managed Care Pharmacy annual meeting (AMCP 2025).
2 Commerce Drive
Cranbury, NJ 08512