Home All Therapies Herceptin

Herceptin

trastuzumab
FDA Approved 1998 Genentech
1. Indications and Usage

HER2-overexpressing adjuvant breast cancer (as part of regimens containing doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, and paclitaxel or docetaxel; with docetaxel and carboplatin; or as single agent following multi-modality anthracycline-based therapy); HER2-overexpressing metastatic breast cancer (with paclitaxel for first-line, or as single agent for ≥2 prior chemo regimens); HER2-overexpressing metastatic gastric or GEJ adenocarcinoma (with cisplatin and capecitabine or 5-FU, first-line)

2. Dosage and Administration

Weekly: Initial 4 mg/kg IV over 90 min, then 2 mg/kg IV over 30 min weekly
Every 3 weeks: Initial 8 mg/kg IV over 90 min, then 6 mg/kg IV over 30-90 min q3w
Adjuvant treatment: 52 weeks total (sequential or concurrent with chemo)

3. Dosage Forms and Strengths

For injection: 150 mg lyophilized powder in single-dose vial; 420 mg multi-dose vial

4. Contraindications

Refer to the complete prescribing information for contraindications. Herceptin prescribing should account for patient-specific factors including hypersensitivity to the active ingredient or any excipients.

5. Warnings and Precautions
⚠ Boxed Warning
CARDIOMYOPATHY: Can cause left ventricular cardiac dysfunction, arrhythmias, hypertension, disabling cardiac failure, cardiomyopathy, and cardiac death. Evaluate LVEF before and during treatment. INFUSION REACTIONS; PULMONARY TOXICITY: Serious and fatal infusion reactions and pulmonary toxicity reported. EMBRYO-FETAL TOXICITY: Oligohydramnios reported.
  • Cardiomyopathy: Incidence of cardiac dysfunction 7-28% depending on regimen. Evaluate LVEF prior to and during treatment.
  • Infusion Reactions: Fatal reactions reported; premedicate and monitor.
  • Pulmonary Toxicity: Including dyspnea, interstitial pneumonitis, pulmonary infiltrates, ARDS.
  • Exacerbation of Chemotherapy-Induced Neutropenia
6. Adverse Reactions
Most Common Adverse Reactions

Headache (26%), diarrhea (25%), nausea (23%), chills (22%), infusion reactions (21%), infection (20%), cough (15%), rash (14%)

Headache
26%
Diarrhea
25%
Nausea
23%
Chills
22%
Infusion Reactions
21%
Infection
20%
Cough
15%
Rash
14%

Consult the complete prescribing information for a comprehensive list of adverse reactions and their frequencies.

7. Drug Interactions

Consult the complete prescribing information for drug interactions, including effects on CYP enzymes, transporters, and concomitant medications that may require dose adjustments or monitoring.

8. Use in Specific Populations
Pregnancy

Consult the full prescribing information for pregnancy-related considerations.

Lactation

Refer to prescribing information for lactation guidance.

Pediatric Use

Pediatric safety and efficacy information is detailed in the full label.

Hepatic/Renal Impairment

Dose modifications for organ impairment are specified in the complete prescribing information.

12. Clinical Pharmacology
Mechanism of Action

Trastuzumab is a recombinant humanized IgG1 monoclonal antibody that selectively binds to the extracellular domain of HER2 (ErbB2). It inhibits HER2-mediated signaling, mediates antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC), and inhibits proliferation of tumor cells that overexpress HER2.

Pharmacokinetics

Half-life: dose-dependent; mean 28.5 days at maintenance doses. Vd: 44 mL/kg. Clearance: 5.15 mL/kg/day (decreased over time). Steady-state by ~20 weeks with weekly dosing, ~16 weeks with q3w. Mean washout time: ~7 months.

14. Clinical Studies

Clinical efficacy and safety data supporting the approval are available in the full prescribing information and from the clinical trials listed below.

Pivotal Clinical Trials
Additional Resources
FDA-Approved Tumor Types

Herceptin has FDA-approved indications across the following cancer types covered on PipelineEvidence:

External Resources
Important Notice: This page is intended as a navigational reference to the FDA-approved prescribing information for Herceptin. It does not replace the full prescribing information. Healthcare professionals should consult the complete package insert available at DailyMed before making prescribing decisions. Patient-specific factors should always guide clinical decision-making.