The HER2CLIMB-02 trial found that adding tucatinib to TDM-1 offered only a modest 2-month PFS benefit. This came at the cost of substantially increased toxicity, including transaminitis and diarrhea, suggesting the two agents are better used sequentially for most patients.

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Trastuzumab deruxtecan (TDXD) and datopotamab deruxtecan (Dato-DXd) share the same cytotoxic payload, yet Dato-DXd has a much lower rate of interstitial lung disease (ILD). This indicates the toxicity is driven by the antibody-antigen interaction, not the payload itself.

The failure of an adjuvant trial for the TKI pazopanib was likely caused by a protocol change that reduced the dose to manage transaminitis. While well-intentioned to improve tolerability and adherence, the lower dose was sub-therapeutic. This serves as a critical lesson that managing side effects by compromising dose can nullify a drug's potential efficacy.

Real-world data suggests that using one antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) immediately after another is often ineffective. A potential strategy to overcome this resistance is to administer a different class of chemotherapy before starting the second ADC.

Data from DESTINY-Breast09 shows TDXD plus pertuzumab dramatically improved progression-free survival in first-line metastatic HER2+ breast cancer. This unprecedented efficacy raises new questions about optimal treatment duration and the potential for de-escalated maintenance therapy after induction.

While the feared side effect of severe lung inflammation (pneumonitis) did not increase, other immune-mediated adverse events did. This led to higher rates of treatment discontinuation in the experimental arm, potentially negating any benefits of the concurrent approach and contributing to the trial's failure.

The DESTINY-Breast11 trial showed a neoadjuvant regimen of TDXD followed by THP achieved a 67.3% pathologic complete response (pCR) rate in high-risk HER2+ breast cancer. This is the highest pCR rate seen in a registrational trial, signaling a potential new standard of care.

Initial studies combining menin inhibitors with venetoclax/azacitidine showed high remission rates but also high mortality. Using each agent at its full, 28-day dose caused severe, fatal myelosuppression, forcing protocol amendments to shorten drug exposure to manage toxicity.

The TRILINX trial revealed Xevinapant's toxicity was so high that it forced reductions in standard, effective treatments like cisplatin and radiation. This compromised the foundational therapy, leading to worse patient outcomes and demonstrating a key risk in adding novel agents to established regimens.

Clinical trial data shows that despite specific toxicities, antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) can be better tolerated overall than standard chemotherapy. For example, trials for both sacituzumab govitecan and dato-DXd reported fewer patients discontinuing treatment in the ADC arm compared to the chemotherapy arm.

Clinicians are hesitant to use newer, potentially safer non-covalent BTK inhibitors before established covalent inhibitors. While it's known that non-covalents work after covalents fail, the reverse is unproven, creating a one-way treatment path that reserves these newer agents for later lines of therapy.