Niraula Saroj
University of British Columbia, Medical Oncologist, BC Cancer, British Columbia, Canada.
Cancer Treat Rev. 2025 May;136:102944. doi: 10.1016/j.ctrv.2025.102944. Epub 2025 Apr 20.
Cyclin-dependent kinase 4 and 6 (CDK4/6) inhibitors have transformed the treatment landscape for metastatic hormone receptor-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer by improving progression-free and Overall Survival (OS). In the adjuvant context, however, results have been discordant and remain immature. The PALLAS and PENELOPE-B trials of palbociclib reported no benefit, while monarchE and NATALEE demonstrated improvements in invasive disease-free survival (iDFS) with abemaciclib and ribociclib, respectively, leading to regulatory approvals despite no demonstrated OS benefit yet. It remains possible that adjuvant CDK4/6 inhibition provides meaningful long-term benefit, but that has not been demonstrated. Concerns related to trial design: risk-enrichment, open-label conduct, high treatment-discontinuation rates, and potential informative censoring complicate interpretation. Although iDFS is a recognized intermediate endpoint with potential psychological validity, it is subject to bias in collection and communication, and has not been validated as a surrogate for OS in this setting. Moreover, early inhibition of CDK4/6 may induce resistance and compromise subsequent efficacy. Reported quality-of-life outcomes were preserved, not improved, which holds limited value considering added toxicity, inconvenience, and cost in a largely curable population. If even half of eligible patients are treated, estimated annual costs in the United States would exceed $7 billion. As these agents are incorporated into clinical guidelines, it is critical to clarify whether they improve long-term outcomes, delay recurrence without affecting survival, or cause unintended harm. Impulse to intervene early is understandable, but emerging data must be carefully assessed to ensure adjuvant CDK4/6 inhibition offers meaningful benefit to patients and health systems.