Kadcyla

Kadcyla

Generic Name

Kadcyla

Brand Names

*Kadcyla*) is an antibody‑drug conjugate (ADC) composed of the anti‑HER2 monoclonal antibody trastuzumab linked to the cytotoxic agent DM1 (maytansinoid). It delivers a potent microtubule inhibitor directly to HER2‑overexpressing tumor cells, minimizing systemic exposure.

Mechanism

  • Targeting: The trastuzumab moiety binds HER2 receptors with high affinity on tumor cells.
  • Internalization: Ligand–receptor binding triggers endocytosis and lysosomal trafficking.
  • Drug release: Lysosomal proteases cleave the linker, releasing free DM1.
  • Cytotoxicity: DM1 binds to β‑tubulin, inhibiting polymerization, arresting the cell cycle in M‑phase, and inducing apoptosis.

Key advantage: Selective delivery of a mitotic inhibitor results in potent antitumor activity while reducing off‑target toxicity typical of conventional chemotherapies.

Pharmacokinetics

ParameterValueNotes
BioavailabilityIntravenous, 100 %
Cmax∼5–10 µg/mLPeak at end of infusion
Half‑life3–4 days (trastuzumab component)DM1 component eliminated with antibody
DistributionVd ≈ 20 LLimited distribution outside vascular compartment
MetabolismProteolysis into trastuzumab and DM1; hepatic enzymes contribute minimallyDM1 metabolized by CYP3A4 (minor)
EliminationBiliary excretion of intact antibody fragments; renal clearance of low‑molecular‑weight metabolites

Clinical implication: Steady‑state achieved after 3–4 cycles (≈3 weeks each). No accumulation of DM1 in serum.

Indications

  • HER2‑positive metastatic breast cancer (MBC) that has progressed after trastuzumab and a taxane, or after trastuzumab, a taxane, and an anthracycline.
  • HER2‑positive early‑stage breast cancer when trastuzumab therapy is contraindicated or not tolerated.

Contraindications

  • Known hypersensitivity to trastuzumab, DM1, or any formulation component.
  • Active left ventricular dysfunction (EF < 55 %) or significant heart failure.
  • Severe hepatic impairment (Child‑Pugh C) – dose adjustment or avoidance advised.
  • Peripheral neuropathy ≥ grade 2 at baseline (increases risk of worsening).
  • Pregnancy & lactation – category B; avoid if possible due to unknown fetal risk.

Dosing

  • Standard dose: 3.6 mg/kg IV over 90 min every 3 weeks.
  • Infusion rate: 4 mL/min initial (increase to 10 mL/min after 30 min if tolerated).
  • Premedication: Not routinely required; administer antihistamine if patient has history of infusion reactions.
  • Duration: Up to 12 cycles (±1) unless disease progression or unacceptable toxicity.

Adverse Effects

  • Common (≥10 %):
  • Infusion‑related reactions (rash, pruritus, fever)
  • Fatigue
  • Diarrhea
  • Nausea/vomiting
  • Oral mucositis
  • Serious (≥1 %):
  • Neutropenia (grade 3–4) – ↑ risk of infection
  • Thrombocytopenia – ↑ bleeding risk
  • Cardiac events – arrhythmias, heart failure, decreased LVEF
  • Peripheral neuropathy – sensory deficits, tingling, numbness
  • Hepatotoxicity – elevated transaminases, bilirubin
  • Infusion‑related anaphylaxis – rare but potentially fatal

Monitoring

  • Baseline & every 3 weeks:
  • CBC with differential (neutrophils, platelets)
  • LFTs (ALT, AST, bilirubin)
  • Electrocardiogram (ECG) and LVEF (echocardiogram or MUGA scan)
  • Patient‑reported:
  • Signs of infection, bleeding, neuropathy, visual changes
  • During infusion:
  • Vital signs (BP, heart rate, temperature)
  • Watch for hypersensitivity symptoms

Clinical Pearls

1. Cardiac Vigilance: Even though cardiotoxicity is infrequent with Kadcyla vs traditional HER2 therapies, baseline LVEF ≥55 % and quarterly echo help pre‑empt irreversible decline.

2. Premedication Strategy: A single dose of 100 mg diphenhydramine IV 30 min pre‑infusion can reduce mild infusion reactions without compromising efficacy.

3. Dose Adjustment in Hepatic Disease: In mild‑moderate hepatic impairment (Child‑Pugh A/B), the standard dose is acceptable; consider dose reduction to 3.0 mg/kg if transaminases >5× ULN.

4. Neuropathy Management: If grade 2 neuropathy occurs, postpone the next dose until symptoms resolve to grade 0–1; consider dose reduction if persistent.

5. Antibody‑Drug Conjugate Advantage: Kadcyla’s DM1 linker is stable in circulation, releasing the cytotoxic payload only after endosomal proteolysis—this design limits non‑tumor exposure and reduces typical microtubule‑inhibitor toxicity.

6. Therapeutic Sequencing: In patients progressing on trastuzumab‑based regimens, Kadcyla offers a distinct mechanism by combining trastuzumab’s HER2 blockade with targeted microtubule inhibition, thereby overcoming resistance mechanisms associated with HER2 antagonism alone.

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• *Prepared for medical students and clinicians; stay updated with the latest FDA label changes and ongoing clinical trials for Kadcyla.*

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