In this episode, Hope Rugo, MD, of City of Hope, shares insights from the SERENA-6 trial, which evaluated ctDNA-guided treatment changes for patients with HR+/HER2-negative metastatic breast cancer. She explains the reasoning behind monitoring for ESR1 mutations before clinical progression and details how switching to camizestrant with a CDK4/6 inhibitor impacted progression-free survival compared with continuing an aromatase inhibitor. According to Dr. Rugo, these results could mark a turning point toward earlier, biomarker-driven treatment adjustments for patients with HR+/HER2-negative breast cancer.
Transcript
Dr. Rugo: Hello, I’m Hope Rugo, a breast medical oncologist and director of the Division of Breast Oncology and the Women’s Cancers Programs at the City of Hope Comprehensive Cancer Center. At ASCO 2025 this year, we heard the much anticipated results of SERENA-6. I’m going to start with a few different areas to cover explaining SERENA-6, what brought the trial into being, what the drugs are that are being used and what the implications are for this trial and for other trials like this in the future. So the first question is really why was SERENA-6 trial initiated as a ctDNA-guided trial? The whole idea behind the trial is based on the idea that you could find molecular evidence of disease becoming resistant to current therapy and that if you targeted the cancer before there was imaging or symptom evidence of progressive disease that you would have a better response. There would be less burden of disease. There would be less resistance that has developed under the pressure of treatment.