Eribulin mesylate in the management of metastatic breast cancer and other solid cancers: a drug review
- PMID: 24852360
- DOI: 10.1586/14737140.2014.920693
Eribulin mesylate in the management of metastatic breast cancer and other solid cancers: a drug review
Abstract
In the new era of 'precision' cancer medicine, new drug development has shifted from cytotoxic chemotherapy to molecularly targeted agents. Eribulin mesylate, a microtubule-destabilizing agent, is the only 'classical' cytotoxic agent approved for the treatment of breast cancer in the last 7 years. This synthetic analogue of halichondrin B, isolated from the marine sponge 'Halicondria Okaida', was responsible for prolonging overall survival of heavily pretreated metastatic breast cancer patients in a large Phase III trial. Eribulin is now under clinical development in earlier settings such as the neo-adjuvant and adjuvant settings. Furthermore, its unique mechanism of action and the absence of cross-resistance with taxanes have led to the design of clinical trials in multiple indications: bladder cancer, lung cancer, prostate cancer… The main adverse events are neutropenia, fatigue and peripheral neuropathy.
Keywords: breast cancer; chemotherapy; eribulin; review; solid tumor.
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