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Oncologists distinguish between HER2 amplification (the target for ADCs like TDXD) and activating mutations. A patient whose tumor loses amplification but retains a mutation is considered "HER2 mutated," not "HER2 positive," and is generally not a candidate for ADC therapy.

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While Trastuzumab deruxtecan (TDXD) is effective in HER2-low breast cancer, there is no evidence that it benefits patients with HER2-low or HER2-intermediate (IHC 2+/FISH negative) gastric cancer. Its use should be strictly limited to truly HER2-positive cases in this disease.

Unlike in breast cancer, where HER2 IHC 2+ requires FISH confirmation, in gynecologic cancers an IHC 2+ result is often considered directly actionable for prescribing HER2-targeted ADCs like T-DXD. This reflects a different, less stringent clinical standard for biomarker-guided therapy in this setting.

NGS testing is revealing that acquired HER2 kinase domain mutations, not amplifications, are an emerging resistance mechanism in ER+ lobular breast cancer. This creates a targetable population for HER2 TKIs like neratinib or tucatinib, offering a new line of targeted therapy.

Patients with HER2-positive GI cancers can lose expression after treatment. While re-biopsy is ideal, it's often impractical or risky. In these cases, clinicians find ctDNA analysis of HER2 copy numbers to be a reliable alternative for guiding subsequent treatment decisions.

Experts question if HER2 status truly predicts ADC efficacy in urothelial cancer. The benefit seen across low-expression levels suggests HER2's main role may be simply to target the chemo payload to cancer cells, rather than indicating a specific biological dependency.

Emerging data shows that a second ADC, particularly one with the same payload, often has limited efficacy. This suggests clinicians must be highly strategic in selecting the first ADC, as it may be their most impactful opportunity for this class of drugs.

In HER2-positive colorectal cancer, the choice of targeted therapy depends on RAS mutation status. The tucatinib/trastuzumab combination is effective only in RAS wild-type patients. In contrast, the antibody-drug conjugate trastuzumab deruxtecan (TDXD) shows efficacy regardless of whether a RAS mutation is present.

Contrary to concerns about cross-resistance between HER2 antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs), retrospective data shows TDM-1 remains effective after progression on TDXD. This suggests the different cytotoxic payloads are key, allowing for effective sequencing and challenging the assumption that progression on one ADC class member precludes using another.

Due to selective pressure from first-line treatment, 30-40% of HER2-positive gastroesophageal cancers lose HER2 expression by the time of progression. It is crucial to re-test these patients, either via tissue biopsy or ctDNA, to confirm continued HER2 positivity before initiating second-line HER2-targeted therapy like TDXD.

In the increasingly common scenario of a patient with multiple positive biomarkers, a clear hierarchy exists for treatment decisions. Based on the robustness and maturity of clinical trial data, HER2-directed therapy is the top priority, followed by PD-L1 immunotherapy, with Claudin-18.2 targeting considered third.