Dose Escalation Followed by Study of RAD001 in Combination With Trastuzumab in HER2-Positive Metastatic Breast Cancer

Dose Escalation Followed by Study of RAD001 in Combination With Trastuzumab in HER2-Positive Metastatic Breast Cancer

Description
Description

Since we are looking for the dose of RAD001 that can be given safely in combination with trastuzumab, not everyone will receive the same amount of RAD001. Small groups of participants will be enrolled at a certain dose of RAD001 and if they tolerate the medications well, the next small group will receive a higher dose. This will continue until the optimal dose of RAD001 that can be given in combination with trastuzumab is found.

Blood will be drawn on days 1, 2, 8, and 15 of the first cycle of treatment and then once at every 4 cycles for everolimus pharmacokinetics analysis.

There is an optional tissue biopsy component to this study asking for 2 biopsies performed pre-treatment and after the cycle one.

We will keep track of the participants medical condition for the next three years by calling them on the telephone twice a year to see how they are doing.

OBJECTIVES:

Primary

To assess the safety and tolerability of RAD001 in combination with trastuzumab in HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer

Secondary

To evaluate the activity of RAD001 plus trastuzumab, as defined by objective response rate, in patients with progression on a trastuzumab-containing regimen

To evaluate changes in signaling molecules in response to trastuzumab and RAD001 in circulating tumor cells and tumor tissue

To evaluate the pharmacokinetics of RAD001 in combination with trastuzumab.

STATISTICAL DESIGN:

This Phase I study followed a standard 3+3 dose escalation design with two dose levels of everolimus in combination with trastuzumab to be evaluated. The DLT observation period was cycle one (first 21 days of treatment). There is a 20 patient expansion cohort treated at the MTD. The regimen would be considered promising if at least 2 objective responses are observed out of 20 treated patients. If the true but unknown response rate is 15% then the probability of observing at least 2 responses is 82% but if the true rate is 5% this probability reduces to 26%.