Adjuvant HER2+ Breast Cancer: Single agent for adjuvant treatment of patients with HER2-positive early breast cancer who have residual invasive disease after neoadjuvant taxane and trastuzumab-based treatment.
Metastatic HER2+ Breast Cancer: Single agent for treatment of patients with HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer who previously received trastuzumab and a taxane, separately or in combination.
Recommended dose: 3.6 mg/kg IV every 3 weeks (21-day cycle)
First infusion: Over 90 minutes with observation for 90 minutes
Subsequent infusions: Over 30 minutes if prior infusion tolerated, with 30-minute observation
Dose reductions: First: 3.0 mg/kg; Second: 2.4 mg/kg. Discontinue if unable to tolerate 2.4 mg/kg.
Do not substitute with or for trastuzumab or fam-trastuzumab deruxtecan
For injection: 100 mg, 160 mg lyophilized powder in single-dose vial
None listed in the prescribing information.
Fatigue (36%), Nausea (40%), Musculoskeletal Pain (36%), Hemorrhage (32%), Thrombocytopenia (31%), Headache (28%), Increased Transaminases (28%), Constipation (27%), Epistaxis (23%), Arthralgia (19%)
Consult the complete prescribing information for a comprehensive list of adverse reactions and their frequencies.
CYP3A4 Inhibitors: DM1 (emtansine) is metabolized mainly by CYP3A4. Avoid concurrent strong CYP3A4 inhibitors when possible due to potential for increased DM1 exposure and toxicity.
Consult the full prescribing information for pregnancy-related considerations.
Refer to prescribing information for lactation guidance.
Pediatric safety and efficacy information is detailed in the full label.
Dose modifications for organ impairment are specified in the complete prescribing information.
Ado-trastuzumab emtansine is an antibody-drug conjugate containing the anti-HER2 humanized IgG1 monoclonal antibody trastuzumab covalently linked to the microtubule inhibitory drug DM1 (derivative of maytansine) via a stable thioether linker (MCC). Upon binding to HER2 on tumor cells, the ADC undergoes receptor-mediated internalization and lysosomal degradation, resulting in intracellular release of DM1-containing catabolites that disrupt microtubules and cause cell death. The antibody component retains mechanisms of action of trastuzumab: inhibition of HER2 signaling, Fc-mediated ADCC, and inhibition of HER2 extracellular domain shedding.
Tmax: end of infusion. ADC Half-life: ~4 days. Vd: 3.13 L. Steady state by Cycle 1. DM1 metabolized by CYP3A4/5. Elimination primarily via catabolism. Minimal urinary excretion.
Clinical efficacy and safety data supporting the approval are available in the full prescribing information and from the clinical trials listed below.
Kadcyla has FDA-approved indications across the following cancer types covered on CancerDrugEvidence:
Kadcyla (ado-trastuzumab emtansine) is an FDA-approved oncology agent. Refer to the full prescribing information for complete indication details.
Refer to the full prescribing information for dosing schedules, administration instructions, and dose modifications.
Ado-trastuzumab emtansine is an antibody-drug conjugate containing the anti-HER2 humanized IgG1 monoclonal antibody trastuzumab covalently linked to the microtubule inhibitory drug DM1 (derivative of maytansine) via a stable thioether linker (MCC). Upon binding to HER2 on tumor cells, the ADC undergoes receptor-mediated internalization and lysosomal degradation, resulting in intracellular release
Fatigue (36%), Nausea (40%), Musculoskeletal Pain (36%), Hemorrhage (32%), Thrombocytopenia (31%), Headache (28%), Increased Transaminases (28%), Constipation (27%), Epistaxis (23%), Arthralgia (19%) Fatigue 36% Nausea 40% Musculoskeletal Pain 36% Hemorrhage 32% Thrombocytopenia 31% Headache 28% Inc