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Efficacy and Safety of Extended-Dose Interval Immunotherapy Versus Standard-Dose Interval Immunotherapy for Advanced Triple-Negative Breast Cancer
Sponsor: Sun Yat-Sen Memorial Hospital of Sun Yat-Sen University
Summary
Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC), defined by the lack of ER, PR and HER2 expression, is refractory to endocrine therapy and anti-HER2 agents. Chemotherapy was once the mainstay for advanced TNBC, but its limited efficacy necessitates optimized therapeutic strategies. TNBC's high TIL infiltration and elevated PD-L1 expression confer sensitivity to immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs), with ICI-chemotherapy combinations initially establishing first-line standard status. Emerging clinical evidence shows that ICI-antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) combinations outperform ICI-chemotherapy regimens, yet immune-related adverse events (irAEs) remain a critical clinical challenge. Expert consensus recommends continuing ICI therapy in advanced TNBC patients achieving CR, PR or SD after ICI-based combination therapy until disease progression or intolerable toxicity. Mechanistically, once ICIs reach target receptor saturation, dose escalation or high-frequency administration fails to boost efficacy but raises toxicity risk. Thus the investigators hypothesize that an ICI maintenance strategy with fixed dose and extended intervals can preserve efficacy, reduce toxicity, improve patient compliance, enhance quality of life and alleviate economic burden for advanced TNBC patients with CR/PR/SD after ICI-chemotherapy or ICI-ADC treatment.
Official title: Efficacy and Safety of Extended-Dose Interval Immunotherapy Versus Standard-Dose Interval Immunotherapy for Advanced Triple-Negative Breast Cancer: A Multicenter Randomized Controlled Clinical Trial
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - 70 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
416
Start Date
2025-12-31
Completion Date
2028-12-31
Last Updated
2026-02-10
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
Extended-Dose Interval Immunotherapy
During the maintenance therapy phase, the dose of PD-1 inhibitors is maintained at the same level as in the standard treatment phase, with the dosing interval extended to every 6 weeks (q6w).
Standard-Dose Interval Immunotherapy
During the maintenance therapy phase, the dosage and dosing interval of PD-1 inhibitors are consistent with those in the standard therapy phase, administered every 3 weeks (q3w).
Locations (1)
Breast Tumor Center, Sun Yat-sen Memorial Hospital
Guangzhou, Guangdong, China