Elacestrant shows promising antitumour activity in early breast cancer

07 Apr 2025
Elacestrant shows promising antitumour activity in early breast cancer

Preoperative treatment with the oral nonsteroidal selective ER degrader elacestrant appears to yield biological and molecular responses in early-stage breast cancer, while having a manageable safety profile, as shown in a phase I trial.

The trial included 22 postmenopausal women with untreated ER-positive/HER2-negative breast cancer (T1c [≥1.5 cm] to T3, N0, locally assessed Ki67 ≥10 percent). These patients received elacestrant at 345 mg daily for 4 weeks.

The primary efficacy endpoint of complete cell cycle arrest, defined as Ki67 ≤2.7 percent, on day 28 occurred in 27.3 percent of patients. Mean Ki67 expression decreased by 52.9 percent (95 percent confidence interval, −67.4 to −32.1) from baseline (p=0.007).

Treatment with elacestrant was also associated with a shift toward a more endocrine-sensitive and less proliferative tumour phenotype based on PAM50-based gene signatures. Specifically, there was an increased expression of immune-response genes (GZMBCD4, and CD8A) and decreased expression of estrogen-signaling genes (MKI67ESR1, and AR). Notably, these biological changes occurred regardless of the levels of Ki67 suppression on day 28.

As for safety, frequently reported adverse events were grade 1 anaemia (21.7 percent), hot flushes (8.7 percent), constipation (8.7 percent), and abdominal pain (8.7 percent). A grade 3 cutaneous rash occurred in one patient, leading to treatment discontinuation. No other serious adverse events were documented.

Clin Cancer Res 2025;31:1223-1232