Abstract
Central review of radiotherapy (RT) delivery within multicentre clinical trials was initiated in the early 1970’s in the USA. Early quality assurance (QA) publications often focused on metrics related to process, logistics and timing. Our objective was to review the available evidence supporting correlation of RT quality with clinical outcomes within cooperative group trials. Medline search was performed to identify multicentre studies which described central subjective assessment of RT protocol compliance (quality). Data abstracted included method of central review, definition of deviations, and clinical outcomes. Seventeen multicentre studies (1980–2012) were identified, plus one Patterns of Care Study. Disease sites were hematologic, head and neck, lung, breast and pancreas. Between 0% and 97% of treatment plans received an overall grade of acceptable. In seven trials, failure rates were significantly higher after inadequate versus adequate RT. 5/9 and 2/5 trials reported significantly worse overall and progression-free survival after poor quality RT, respectively. One reported a significant correlation and two reported non-significant trends towards increased toxicity with non-compliant RT. Although more data are required, protocol-compliant RT may decrease failure rates and increase overall survival and likely contributes to the ability of collected data to answer the central trial question.
Keywords: quality assurance, clinical outcomes, trial design, cooperative group
Introduction
Central review of radiotherapy (RT) delivery within multicentre clinical trials was initiated in the early 1970’s in the USA. The initial purpose was to increase the number of patients accrued to studies who were ultimately evaluable as specified by each protocol (1). Early quality assurance (QA) performed by the CALGB and other clinical trial groups revealed non-uniformity of treatment strategies and suggested a need for monitoring, particularly when participants were asked to employ a regimen that differed from their standard technique (2). Aside from the suggestion of increased patient evaluability with central QA office intervention, initial publications focused largely on metrics related to process, logistics, and timing (3).
QA is the systematic effort to monitor performance, to compare quality to a predefined standard, and to implement corrective measures if performance does not meet requirements within a certain margin (4). QA in radiotherapy (RT) includes procedures that ensure the consistent and safe fulfillment of an RT prescription with regard to dose to the target and normal tissues, minimization of exposure of personnel, and patient monitoring aimed at determining the results of treatment (5). A QA program should define the range of acceptable deviations, detect potential causes, and develop mechanisms of action for correction and prevention of deviations. Hence QA in RT must oversee each step from patient simulation to treatment planning, to beam production and patient follow-up (6).
According to van Tienhoven et al, trial-specific QA procedures should be: feasible; capable of quantifying variations in treatment parameters; able to detect protocol variations early in the course of a trial; able to contribute to correction of deviations; and finally, able to demonstrate an impact on the final outcome of the study (7). Central patient-specific RT plan review, also known as “rapid review”, instituted by many cooperative clinical trial groups and QA centres, is suitable to evaluate both patient- and tumour-related eligibility as well as application of protocol RT (8–9).
The objective of this work was to review available evidence for correlation of RT quality with clinical outcomes within multicentre cooperative group clinical trials.
Methods
Medline search was performed to identify candidate multicenter studies with no restrictions on date of publication but restricted to the English language (Appendix 1). Eligibility criteria included multicentre trials which accrued adults only, were published in full, and led by any cooperative clinical trial study group. Included studies described central subjective and/or objective assessment of external beam RT protocol compliance (quality) and reported correlations between RT quality and clinical outcomes. Additional studies were identified from reference lists of retrieved papers and review articles. Data were abstracted from QA publications and, where necessary, companion clinical publications, concerning the methodology of central evaluation, deviation rates and clinical outcomes. Correlation of compliance of RT delivered per-protocol with response rates (RR), locoregional or distant failure, progression-free survival (PFS), overall survival (OS), and toxicity was analyzed. Although source publication terminology differed, “deviation” has been used throughout this analysis for consistency.
Results
General
Seventeen multicentre trials described in 16 articles published over three decades (1980–2012) and one Patterns of Care Study (PCS) were identified (2–3,10–24)(Table 1). In addition to the PCS, there were eight cooperative trial groups represented, based in North America, Europe and Australia. Disease sites were hematologic (13, 17–21), head and neck (3,14–15,23), lung (10–12), breast (2,16) and pancreas (22,24). The central trial question was RT-related in ten trials, and in 11, chemotherapy was to have been delivered to at least half of patients accrued (induction chemotherapy [17,19–21]; induction + adjuvant [10,12]; concurrent [3,13,15]; concurrent + maintenance [22]; and induction + concurrent + adjuvant [24]). The trial’s primary endpoint was negative in 16/18 trials and either unknown or not applicable in the remainder (13,23). The maximum number of institutions participating in central review was 212 (19). Reported median follow-up for patients analysed within the QA publications ranged from 2.8 – 8.1 years (N=10 trials).3/18
Table 1.
Trial (Ref) | Disease | Open | Accrued | Trial Randomization |
---|---|---|---|---|
Heme | ||||
PCS (13) | Stage I–III HL | 1976* | 253 | Extended survey of treatment and outcomes after RT alone or concurrent chemoRT |
SWOG 7808 (17) | Stage III–IV HL | 1978 – 1988 | 278 | Randomized those with complete response to induction chemo -> 20Gy involved field RT vs no RT |
GHSG HD4 (18) | Favourable stage I–II HL | 1988 – 1994 | 382 | 40Gy extended field RT vs 30Gy extended field + 10Gy boost to involved field (no chemotherapy) |
GHSG HD7 (21) | Favourable stage I–II HL | 1994 – 1998 | 650 | 30Gy extended field RT + 10Gy involved field boost vs multiagent induction chemo -> same RT |
GHSG HD8 (19) | Unfavourable stage I–II HL | 1993 – 1998 | 1204 | Patients without PD after induction chemo randomized to extended vs involved field RT (doses as in HD4) |
EORTC 20884 (20) | Stage III–IV HL | 1989 – 2000 | 421 | Randomized those with complete response to induction chemo -> 24Gy involved field RT vs no RT |
H&N | ||||
RTOG 7102 (14) | Base of tongue | 1971 – 1976 | 145 | 66Gy/30 continuous vs split course RT (30Gy/10 -> break - > 30Gy/10) |
RTOG 7913 (15) | Inoperable H&N | 1979 – 1983 | 210 | 66-73.8Gy/33-41 continuous vs 60Gy/50 via 1.2Gy delivered twice per day |
RTOG 7915 (15) | Inoperable H&N | 1979 – 1983 | 306 | 66-73.8Gy/33-41 RT +/− radiosensitizer misonidazole |
RTOG 0022** (23) | T1-2 N0-2 Oropharynx | 2001 – 2005 | 69 | Feasibility study of moderately accelerated radical SIB IMRT alone |
TROG 0202 (3) | Stage III–IV head & neck^ | 2002 – 2005 | 861 | Concurrent chemoRT versus concurrent chemoRT + radiosensitizer tirapazamine |
Lung | ||||
SWOG 7628 (12) | Limited stage SCLC | 1976 – 1979 | 298 | 2 × 2 randomization: two different multiagent chemo regimens; BCG or no BCG; all received chest and brain RT |
SECSG 76 (10) | Limited stage SCLC | 1976† | 70 | RT (chest/brain) + concurrent multiagent chemo vs same RT alone |
RTOG 7301 (11) | Unresectable stage III NSCLC | 1973 – not spec | 481 | 40Gy split course RT vs 40Gy/20 vs 50Gy/25 vs 60Gy/30 continuous |
Breast | ||||
NSABP B04 (2) | Operable breast | 1971 – 1974 | 1765 | cN0: Radical mast vs total mast vs total mast + regional RT; cN+: Radical mast vs total mast + regional RT |
GBSG I§ (16) | pT1 N0 breast | 1983 – 1989 | 1119 | After lumpectomy + axillary lymph node dissection, randomization to RT or mast |
GI | ||||
RTOG 9704 (24) | Pancreas T1-4 N0-1 post-GTR | 1998 – 2002 | 538 | Adjuvant chemo§ ->50.4Gy RT + concurrent 5FU -> further chemo§; § randomization 5FU vs gem |
RTOG 0411** (22) | Pancreas T1-4 Nx-1 unresectable | 2005 – 2006 | 94 | RT (50.4Gy/28) + concurrent capecitabine/bevacizumab -> maintenance gemcitabine + bevacizumab until progression |
Retrospective review.
Phase II trial.
Excluding T1-2N1 and M1.
Terminated early due to poor accrual.
Randomized trial changed to prospective observational multicentre study due to low accrual.
Abbreviations: chemo – chemotherapy; cN0 – clinically lymph node negative; cN+ - clinically lymph node positive; gem – gemcitabine; GTR – gross total resection; HL – Hodgkin lymphoma; IMRT – intensity-modulated radiotherapy; mast – mastectomy; NSCLC – non-small cell lung cancer; PCS – Patterns of Care Study; PD – progressive disease; RT – radiotherapy; SCLC – small cell lung cancer; SIB – simultaneous integrated boost.
Methodology of Central Review
The methodology and level of detail of each RT plan review procedure varied (Table 2). In 16/18 trials, all patients receiving RT were to have been reviewed. In the PCS, 181 patient records were randomly chosen from five facilities with a large experience in Hodgkin lymphoma. In German Hodgkin’s Study Group (GHSG) HD8, the cohort was not explictly described. The proportion of plans evaluable, however, varied from <50% to >95% of patients who actually received RT. In five trials, central assessment of RT quality was reported as blinded to outcomes. In 13/18 trials, it was performed only after RT completion; in the remaining five, evaluation took place both prior to RT start and retrospectively, including three GHSG trials where RT plans were designed prospectively by a central reference panel.
Table 2.
Trial (Ref) | General QA | Patient-Specific QA | Plan Review Performed |
---|---|---|---|
NSABP B04, 1980 (2) | Site visit by RPC and TMC to evaluate general procedures, machine calibration, output | RT plans and photos examined to verify RT was delivered according to protocol requirements; 1D dosimetry recalculated by RPC & RT reviewed (including port films) by TMC |
|
SWOG 7628, 1982 (12) | Site visits by RPC to check machine calibration | 1D Dosimetric reconstruction by RPC and port films reviewed and graded by study coordinator |
|
SECSG 76, 1981 (10) | Machine calibration monitored by RPC | RT records, dose distributions, isodose curves, simulation and port films reviewed by study coordinator and Quality Control Centre |
|
RTOG 7301, 1982 (11) | Machine calibration monitored by RPC | Port films, daily RT dose records and isodose computations evaluated and 1D dosimetric reconstruction performed by RPC |
|
PCS, 1983 (13) | NS | RT records, hospital records, diagnostic x-rays, simulator films, and port films reviewed by a team of staff radiation oncologists and trained data managers during site visits Dose recalculation performed by physicist team members |
|
RTOG 7102, 1985 (14) | Machine calibration monitored by RPC | Dosimetry, technique of each case reviewed by RPC |
|
RTOG 7913, 1991 (15) | Machine calibration monitored by RPC | Dose recalculation data reviewed by RT staff; study chair reviewed each case for accuracy of treatment plan (simulation/port films), dosimetry and normal tissue |
|
RTOG 7915, 1991 (15) | Machine calibration monitored by RPC | Dose recalculation data reviewed by RT staff; study chair reviewed each case for accuracy of treatment plan (simulation/port films), dosimetry and normal tissue |
|
GBSG I, 1993 (16) | Semi-annual meetings held for review of ongoing studies | 4 reference centres examined RT records for protocol compliance, completeness |
|
SWOG 7808, 1994 (17) | Machine calibration monitored by RPC | Port films, dose calculations and treatment records reviewed by QA centre, RPC and study coordinators |
|
GHSG HD4, 2001 (18) | Information provided to participating RO at annual meetings for quality control | Expert panel designed each RT plan based on staging provided by site**. After RT completed, simulation and port films submitted to reference centre for review. |
|
GHSG HD8, 2003 (19) | Same as HD4 (presumed) | Expert panel designed each RT plan based on staging provided by site**. After completion, simulation and port films submitted to reference centre for review by 4 ROs. |
|
GHSG HD7, 2007 (21) | Same as HD4 (presumed) | Appropriate RT planned centrally by expert RO panel** Retrospective review details NS |
|
EORTC 20884, 2005 (20) | NS | Imaging, RT charts, simulation and port films, and treatment planning calculations reviewed by RO panel |
|
RTOG 0022, 2010 (23) | Credentialed before participation by IMRT plan review + phantom | Delineation evaluated by study chair on initial cases from each site, followed by spot checks. ITC reviewed initial port films, DRRs & dose distributions from each site then spot checks. All plans submitted to ITC. |
|
TROG 02.02, 2010 (3) | NS | Sites submitted diagnostic imaging & RT plans to QARC by the end of the first week of RT. After RT completion, full documentation reviewed by TMC for protocol compliance with secondary review of non-compliant plans for predicted impact on outcome |
|
RTOG 9704, 2012 (24) | Machine calibration monitored by RPC | One PI reviewed submission; if RT was per protocol, no further review done; if RT was less than PP, other PI reviewed to confirm. |
|
RTOG 0411, 2009 (22) | Machine calibration monitored by RPC | Diagnostic imaging, GTV contours, DRRs, simulation films, DVHs, dosimetry including isodose distributions evaluated |
|
Abbreviations: 1D – one-dimensional dose reconstruction to the prescription point specified by each protocol. IMRT – intensity-modulated radiotherapy; NS – not specified; QA – quality assurance; RO – radiation oncologist; RPC – Radiological Physics Centre; TMC – Trial Monitoring Committee.
Retrospective review refers to review subsequent to the completion of protocol radiotherapy.
Central prescription of RT described in some publications as prospective QA.
Submission of materials prospectively was requested but not completed.
The definition of a deviation varied significantly between groups, as well as over time within the same group (e.g. adequate versus inadequate; acceptable, minor or major deviation)(Table 3). What constituted a deviation was defined a priori in five trials (2,14,15,24). Overall protocol deviation grades assigned for RT quality (Table 4) could be reconstructed in 16/18 studies. Between 0% and 97% of treatment plans reviewed were graded as acceptable. Nine trials assigned an overall case grade of major deviation which was received by up to 47% of plans. Analysis of the correlation of RT quality with outcomes was controlled for other prognostic factors in approximately half of the protocols (2,3,12,13,15,18, 21–22,24).
Table 3.
Trial (Ref) | Major Deviation | Minor Deviation |
---|---|---|
Heme | ||
PCS (13)*^ |
|
|
SWOG 7808 (17) |
|
|
GHSG HD4*^ (18) | “Relevant” protocol deviations:
|
|
GHSG HD7* (21) |
|
|
GHSG HD8 (19) | Not defined | Not defined |
EORTC 20884 (20) |
|
Not defined |
H&N | ||
RTOG 7102^ (14) | Major:
Unacceptable:
|
|
RTOG 7913 and RTOG 7915 (15) | Major deviation acceptable:
Major deviation unacceptable:
|
|
RTOG 0022 (23) | For PTVs:
For the parotid glands:
|
For PTV66:
For PTV60:
For PTV54:
For the parotid glands:
|
TROG 0202 (3) |
|
Not defined |
Lung | ||
SWOG 7628 (12)^ |
|
Not specified in publication |
SECSG 76 (10) |
|
|
RTOG 7301 (11) | Major:
Unacceptable:
|
|
Breast | ||
NSABP B04 (2)^ |
|
|
GBSG I§ (16) |
|
|
GI | ||
RTOG 9704 (24)^ | For APPA fields:
For lateral fields:
Boost fields:
Other:
|
For APPA fields:
For lateral fields:
Boost fields:
Other:
|
RTOG 0411** (22) |
|
Not defined |
Not further specified.
Publication listed other parameters assessed for RT quality but definitions of minor versus major deviations not specified.
Abbreviations : GTV – gross tumour volume; LN – lymph node s; max – maximum; OTT – overall treatment time; PA – para-aortic; PTV – planning target volume; RT – radiotherapy; VB – vertebral body.
Table 4.
Trial (Ref) | N Evaluable for Review | Acceptable | Minor Deviation | Major Deviation |
---|---|---|---|---|
NSABP B04 (2) | 646 patients were randomized to RT (352 cN0, 294 cN+), 543 evaluable (298 cN0, 245 cN+) from 34 sites | 253/543 (46.6%)
|
35.5% (193/543)*
|
17.9% (97/543)
|
SWOG 7628 (12) | 277/298 patients eligible of which 140/277 were evaluable for RT | 68.6% (96/140) with no or minor deviation | 31.4% (44/140) | |
SECSG 76 (10) | 53 evaluable | 66% (35/53) fully compliant | 26.4% (14/53) | 7.5% (4/53) |
RTOG 7301 (11) | 346/378 evaluable | 87.7% (277/316) at primary site | NS | 12.3% (39/316) at primary site |
PCS (13) | 181/253 port films from 4 sites | 63.5% (115/181) adequate | 36.5% (66/181) inadequate | |
RTOG 7102 (14) | 142/145 eligible pts were evaluable from 22 sites | 74.4% (102/137)** | 14.6% (20/137)** | 10.9% (15/137) major or unacceptable variation** |
RTOG 7913 (15) | 187 eligible patients (94 hyperfractionated arm, 93 control arm) of which 163 were evaluable for RT plan review (83 hyper- fractionated, 80 control) | 76% of control pts were either per protocol or with a minor deviation versus 72% of hyperfractionated arm | 14% (11/80) major variation rate for control RT vs 24% (20/83) for hyperfractionated RT | |
RTOG 7915 (15) | 297 patients eligible of which 263 were evaluable for RT (130 misonidazole, 133 control) | 75% of control pts were either per protocol or with a minor deviation versus 65% of misonidazole arm | 23% (31/133) major variation rate for control RT versus 30% (39/130) for misonidazole + RT | |
GBSG I (16) | 708/773 pts who got RT were evaluable from 69 sites | 41.2% (292/708) | 41.0% (290/708) | 17.8% (126/708) |
SWOG 7808 (17) | 135 were randomized to RT, of which 104 received it and 96% of patients receiving RT were reviewed (100 presumed) | 86% (86/100) had RT without a major deviation | NS | |
GHSG HD4 (18) | 368/376 eligible patients were reviewed | 63.0% (232/368) had no PD 65.8% (242/368) had no relevant PD for RFS analysis§ |
37.0% (136/368) had ≥1 PD 34.2% (127/368) had ≥1 relevant PD for RFS analysis§ |
|
GHSG HD8 (19) | 1064 eligible patients started RT from 212 sites Number reviewed NS | NS No difference between study arms |
||
GHSG HD7 (21) | 529/627 eligible patients reviewed from 189 sites | 34.2% (181/529) had no PD | NS | 65.8% (348/529) had ≥1 type of PD |
EORTC 20884 (20) | 135/172 patients randomized to RT were evaluable from 42 sites | 53.5% (72/135) had no major deviation | 46.7% (63/135) had ≥1 major deviation | |
RTOG 0022 (23) | 53/67 eligible pts were evaluable from 14 sites | 0% (0/53) | 88.7% (47/53) | 11.3% (6/53) |
TROG 02.02 (3) | 818/853 patients were reviewed by the TMC, of which 780 were reviewed for outcomes from 81 sites | 74.6% (610/818) compliant on 2° review No difference between trial arms |
NS | 25.4% (208/818) non- compliant by TMC review of which 47.1% (97/206) had an expected major adverse impact on local control |
R TOG 9704 (24) | 416/451 eligible patients were evaluable | 51.9% (216/416) PP No difference between trial arms |
48.1% (200/416) were less than PP No difference between trial arms |
|
42.1% (175/416) variation acceptable | 6.0% (25/416) variation unacceptable | |||
RTOG 0411 (22) | 82/94 patients eligible from 36 sites; all evaluable for RT | 86.6% (71/82) no unacceptable deviation | 13.4% (11/82) unacceptable deviation |
Including intermediate
Based on NSD ratio
Numbers from Figure 4 in source publication. Only relevant PDs in patients attaining a complete response are included in RFS analysis.
Abbreviations : cN0 – clinically lymph node negative; cN+ - clinically lymph node positive; NS – not specified; PD – protocol deviation; pp – per protocol; RFS – recurrence-free survival; RT – radiotherapy; TMC – Trial Management Committee.
Outcomes
RR with respect to RT quality were evaluated in two trials and no statistical correlation was observed in either, although in one (12), the complete response (CR) rate was higher for those cases with a minor or no deviation (44% [38/85]) as compared to cases scored as a major deviation (39% [16/41]; p=0.68). In RTOG 7301, response rates (55–59%) were comparable between patients with RT plans with a major deviation at the primary site versus those without (11).
Fourteen trials reported failure rates (locoregional +/− distant) and in seven, these were significantly higher when RT was judged to be inadequate (3,10,13,15,18,23)(Table 5). In another two, failure rates were higher, but not significantly so, after inadequate RT, and in the remaining five trials, there were no significant differences in failure rates reported. PFS was examined in five trials, of which two reported significantly worse PFS in patients with poor quality RT (3,18). Nine trials examined the correlation of adequacy of RT with OS; five suggested that compliant RT significantly increased OS (3,12,15,24). The TROG 0202 trial, for example, reported a 20% improvement in OS between patients with major deficiencies versus those whose RT was initially protocol compliant.
Table 5.
Trial (Ref) | Locoregional and/or Distant Failure | Progression-Free Survival | Overall Survival |
---|---|---|---|
NSABP B04 (2) |
|
NR |
|
SWOG 7628 (12) |
|
NR |
|
SECSG 76 (10) |
|
NR | NR |
RTOG 7301 (11) |
|
NR |
|
PCS (13) |
|
NR | NR |
RTOG 7102 (14) | NR | NR | 2 year OS with no evidence of disease**:
|
RTOG 7913 & 7915 (15) |
|
NR |
|
GBSG I (16) | NR | No significant difference in DFS for no/minor vs major deviation* | NR |
SWOG 7808 (17) |
|
NR | NR |
GHSG HD4 (18) |
|
|
NR |
GHSG HD8 (19) |
|
|
|
GHSG HD7 (21) | NR |
|
NR |
EORTC 20884 (20) |
|
NR | NR |
RTOG 0022 (23) |
|
NR | NR |
TROG 02.02 (3) |
|
|
|
RTOG 9704 (24) |
|
NR |
|
No p value given in source publication.
Based on NSD ratio.
P value for log-rank test on the difference between cumulative relapse rates.
780 patients with evaluable plans who received at least 60Gy were analyzed for outcomes.
Abbreviation : DFS – disease-free survival; FFTF – freedom from treatment failure; LRC – locoregional control; LRR – locoregional recurrence; MS – median survival; NR – not reported; OS – overall survival; PD – protocol deviation; PP – per protocol; RFS – recurrence-free survival.
Reports from three studies evaluated toxicity in relation to RT quality. In RTOG 0411, there was a significant correlation between major deviations and the incidence of grade three or higher gastrointestinal toxicity during both the concurrent chemoRT (45% vs 18%; [p=0.05]) and maintenance chemotherapy phases (45% vs 13%; [p=0.01])(22). Two additional trials described non-significant trends towards increased toxicity with non-compliant RT (14,24). In RTOG 7102, there were 22.2% (10/45) serious complications with protocol-required three field treatment vs 9.8% (8/82) with two fields (p=NS). Additionally, 36.3% (4/11) of patients treated with non-protocol source-to-skin distances (SSD) sustained serious soft tissue complications, compared to 10.8% (14/130) treated with the correct SSD (no p value reported). In RTOG 9704, there were no significant differences in grade three or higher acute toxicities in the 5FU arm based on RT plan QA score, but in the gemcitabine arm, there was a trend towards increased toxicity for non-protocol compliant RT plans for both hematologic (p=0.08) and non-hematologic (p=0.06) grade four toxicity.
Discussion
Despite concerted efforts by cooperative clinical trial groups to ensure uniformity of protocol radiotherapy, variation in its administration persists (24). Potential reasons for the inability to comply with protocol RT are listed in Table 6. Although the trials reviewed reveal varying degrees of compliance, it is of course not known how these results compare with other studies where less comprehensive or no QA took place (25). The validity of conclusions of past studies may be called into question depending on the rigor of central QA performed (24,26) since the magnitude of the detrimental effect of non-compliant RT can be larger, in some cases significantly, than the anticipated benefit of the interventions studied (3,24). Understanding the incidence, types and reasons for deviations contributes significantly to our understanding of the application and limitations of RT on and off-study (27,28).
Table 6.
Reason | References |
---|---|
|
43–44 |
|
7,13,44–45 |
|
18,20,22 |
|
20,45 |
|
44–45 |
|
44 |
|
18 |
|
26,37 |
|
46 |
|
2,3,16,18,23,34 |
There was significant variation in the reported proportions of randomized, eligible and treated patients with RT plans evaluable for central review. This observed variation impacts cross-trial comparisons and generalizability of conclusions. If RT plans are not systematically reviewed in a consistent manner, bias may be introduced in the number and type of deviations seen. For example, in the EORTC 22991 trial, retrospective central plan review was conducted only for major participating sites, which due to institutional experience and available resources probably positively affected the results (9). In trials reviewed here, plans may not have been available or sites may have been non-compliant in submitting data at the appropriate time. Patients were taken off study prior to starting RT (12), and excluded if they did not complete all (10) or a certain proportion of planned RT (e.g. ≥85% of prescribed dose [3]). In NSABP B04, patients who started RT greater than six weeks after surgery were excluded from the quality analysis (2). Those with gross geographic misses or other unacceptable variations were considered inevaluable by SECSG76 investigators (10). In the combined RTOG 7913/7915 analysis, patients with less than 90 days of follow-up and those with major deviations were excluded from assessment of RT protocol compliance (15). Entire sites have been removed from quality analysis in past publications if they did not accrue a minimum number of patients. The exclusion of these patients before they could ever be evaluated may in fact dilute published results.
There were also significant differences in central review methodology for the trials included, which represent progression from the paper/hard copy film to the digital era. Some groups instituted general QA such as site visits, machine calibration checks and baseline credentialing. The specific components of RT plans actually reviewed (CT simulation films, port films, contours, DVHs, isodose curves) also varied, as well as whether case report forms and baseline diagnostic imaging was concurrently evaluated. Dosimetric recalculation was reported by five trials. The composition of the review committee could be the study chair alone, an independent panel, or a cooperative group QA office. In the GHSG protocols, a panel designed each patient’s RT plan and then evaluated its subsequent delivery by the local site. Central analysis of RT was performed retrospectively and/or prospectively, impacting whether the prescribing physician had an opportunity to modify the plan prior to completion of treatment. Review may or may not have been blinded to clinical outcomes such as local recurrence. This spectrum of QA procedures further increases the uncertainty in the comparability of correlation of outcomes between trials. Efforts to harmonize QA practices with the formation of the Advanced Technology Consortium in the USA and the Global Harmonization of RT QA in Clinical Trials group are underway (29).
Trials evaluated also represent significant evolution in treatment delivery capability. Although it is apparent that historical findings regarding RT quality cannot be directly extrapolated to current practice and technology, they have been included in this review for several reasons. They impact the confidence with which we now interpret the results of those (and contemporary) trials, some of which still influence practice today. They confirm quantitatively what has always been intuitively believed to be true; for example, that geographic miss is of major concern, and they have contributed to the evolution of optimal treatment in many disease sites. Similar to the ongoing clinical reliance on many trials with outdated RT, until there is a body of evidence directly applicable to today’s advanced techniques, in order to make informed decisions on most appropriate utilization of resources for QA, this collection of historical and current data must suffice.
There are several potential reasons why the quality of RT was not found to correlate with clinical outcomes in some trials reviewed. It is not likely that all assessed parameters (eg target volume, normal tissue dose constraints, beam arrangement) have an equal probability of affecting clinical outcomes, and yet in most trial reports, different deviations are weighted equally. The required degree of compliance to avoid assignment of deviations may be too strict or not strict enough (16,23,30). In the EORTC 22922 trial, variation in planning methods between centres and individualization of RT to patient anatomy were not considered deviations as long as planning aims were achieved (31), but this leniency has not been commonly permitted by other clinical trial groups. RT treatment quality may not be perfect, but may not correlate with outcomes if it in fact meets minimal criteria for acceptability; alternatively, it may be so inadequate that the degree to which it is deficient does not materially affect outcomes. Additionally, quality may not appear to predict outcomes if an insensitive endpoint is chosen for analysis or if there has been insufficient follow-up (16).
Historically, the impact of poor quality RT treatment was presumed to be addressed by the process of randomization and/or washed out by the use of systemic therapy. However, some trials do report differences in distribution of deviations by treatment arm. In terms of the impact of chemotherapy on protocol deviations, we have found no obvious trends. In HD7, more patients received the protocol deviation “too little” RT after chemotherapy (p=0.035) (21). Concurrent chemotherapy with RT in 26 patients in the PCS study eliminated the adverse effect of inadequate margins with no significant increase in recurrence (13). In the seminal TROG 0202 protocol, Peters et al describe the possibility that the higher cisplatin dose in the control arm could have compensated to some degree for poor RT (3). Since chemotherapy was introduced into early stage GHSG trials, no significant influence of RT quality on freedom from treatment failure has been evident (32). Chemotherapy delivery has rarely been rigorously monitored, and has usually been accepted at face value as delivered per protocol without significant variations. Administration of chemotherapy, however, should not allow what constitutes acceptable RT to be less rigorously defined (10,13).
RT quality may correlate with clinical outcomes without being causative. There may be a differential rate of toxic deaths by treatment arm which may be confounded by the effects of other modalities. Some primary sites and stages are more difficult to plan and treat; the possible impact of primary and nodal disease stage was investigated in TROG 0202 with no significant differences found (3). Tumour location, size, and number of positive nodes also failed to explain deviation rates in NSABP B04 (2). While potentially explanatory correlations between patient/disease characteristics and protocol variations should be ruled out before ascribing differences in outcomes to RT quality (11), only half of trials reviewed reported multivariate analysis. In one of these, RTOG 9704, the authors report an inability to find other possible explanations (24). This lack of apparent correlation may also relate to the inability to fully blind RT studies. In an early GHSG trial, there was a difference between treatment arms, with five versus 13 volume-related protocol deviations, leading the authors to suggest that volumes may have been more generously designed in the setting of lower prescribed doses (33).
The impact of institutional experience in terms of number of patients randomized and treated has been extensively reported. It is likely that a learning curve exists (23) such that the more patients accrued to a trial, the better the quality of later submissions. This improved quality may be a result of increased communication and training related to QA mechanisms implemented for the trial. In TROG 0202, the proportion of RT plans with predicted adverse impact on outcome varied significantly by both country and number of patients accrued (<5 versus 20 or greater)(3). For the HD4 trial, the proportion of patients with a protocol deviation was significantly lower in centres that contributed ≥10 cases (p=0.005) but type of centre was not predictive (18). Sites which entered >30 patients demonstrated much lower rates of protocol deviations compared to those with a lower accrual rate in both NSABP B04 (2) and GBSG I (16). However, no correlation with QA score was seen by number of patients enrolled per institution in RTOG 9704 (24).
Other factors contributing to institutional experience include the duration of participation on a particular study and receipt (and application) of feedback from central QA review. Early in the NSABP B04 study, more than 20% of RT plans had a major protocol variation, but as the study progressed, this decreased to <10% and then 0% in the last 6 months of accrual (2). In EORTC 22922, which performed central plan evaluation of subsequent patients from the same institution, target volume delineation was missing in 67% in the first round of review, decreasing to 47% subsequently (34). Continuing medical education (semi-annual meetings with case reviews) and quality control screening improved RT quality during the GBSG I study. During the initial period (1983–1985) only 1/3 of RT was protocol-compliant, increasing to 50% between 1987–1989 (16).
A subset of the trials included in this study has been recently reviewed by authors from the EORTC, who concluded that results of nine prospective phase II/III studies (1994–2012) support the compulsory imposition of credentialing in RT trials since failure to adhere to protocol treatment reduces OS, local control and potentially increases toxicity (35). The challenges associated with QA programs within cooperative group trials were described, along with reasons for resistance to participation and implementation of recommendations. Additionally, a meta-analysis of study-level data from eight cooperative group clinical trials, encompassing both adult and pediatric patients, reported an approximate 75% increase in both overall mortality and aggregated secondary endpoints of local control and event-free survival associated with RT deviations, based on unadjusted hazard ratios (36). The authors found no evidence of publication bias although conceded that the ability to detect it may have been limited by sample size. The effects of minor versus major deviations were not differentiated, and studies evaluated were primarily representative of historical treatment planning methods: 6/8 used 2D treatment planning and no protocols using IMRT were included (36). The focus of this review is on differences in methodology, reporting and analysis to discern specific factors influencing published QA results. Identification of potential predictors allows interpretation of reported correlations with outcomes in the proper context, and in relation to potential sources of bias. We agree that non-protocol compliant RT in multicentre trials may waste time, effort and money (35), but arrive at more cautious conclusions about the impact on clinical outcomes based on broader literature review.
The variation in definitions of deviations discovered is noteworthy: they may be described quantitatively or qualitatively, may be related to target volumes or normal tissues, or may reflect appropriateness of contours, dosimetry or logistics. Definitions and frequencies of protocol deviations must be interpreted in the context of the technological era from which they originate. They reflect not only what was felt to be important for quality RT and presumably clinical outcomes at the time the trials were being designed, but also the degree of sophistication of the tools available for central RT plan assessment. The specificity with which protocol compliance can be evaluated has evolved concomitantly with advances in treatment planning, RT delivery, digital data transfer and ability to perform geographically distributed review. Similar to the fact that past findings regarding RT quality cannot be directly extrapolated to current practice and technology, historical absolute deviation rates probably cannot be directly compared to those derived from modern publications.
There are many questions remaining regarding how deviations should be defined; indeed, this aspect of multicentre clinical trial QA could benefit urgently from harmonization. Based on the data currently available, making specific recommendations for quantitative criteria would be premature. What constitutes a major versus minor deviation must first be standardized to the extent possible, since a ‘one-size-fits-all’ approach may not apply to all disease sites, RT techniques or settings. For example, an overall treatment time exceeding 10% of protocol specifications may reasonably be considered a major deviation for all external beam treatment of unresectable head and neck cancer, but would this also apply to stereotactic body RT for inoperable early stage lung cancer? The strictness with which they are described should probably depend on whether the central question of the trial is RT-related, especially if the main issue is one of radiation dose (7). Definition should also focus on the likelihood of an associated detrimental impact on clinical outcomes without adversely affecting required patient accrual. Plans may not be strictly compliant, but still compatible with reasonable standard of care off-protocol (3). In EORTC 22922, some techniques were recognized to potentially increase late toxicity, but were allowed since they were not foreseen to impact the primary endpoint of overall survival (37). Moreover, the minimum number of patients and composition of the dataset to be reviewed to adequately evaluate protocol compliance has not yet been determined. The optimal timing and type of QA procedures for a given multicenter clinical trial cannot yet be determined with certainty (38), and any recommendations would be incomplete without data on relative cost-effectiveness, which are sorely lacking at present. Evidence from which to derive quantitative deviation criteria will require the establishment of globally harmonized RT QA procedures, a case QA repository with links to clinical outcomes, and further secondary analyses of previously published trials which included various levels of QA (8,38). Finally, as suggested by Bekelman et al, prospective studies evaluating different levels of RT QA as part of the trials themselves are urgently needed (38).
Efforts to improve the quality of RT delivered within cooperative clinical group protocols are ongoing. As advanced technologies are incorporated into and evaluated by multicentre clinical trials, the time and resources required to maintain a rigorous QA program have increased substantially, and are increasingly seen as barriers to accrual (35,38). Cooperative groups would like to avoid the dedication of significant financial resources and time to a large, multicentre trial which then fails to change clinical practice due to perceived flaws, such as the absence of sufficient quality assurance (39). The concern for undue burden on local investigators, however, must be balanced with the need to ensure safe delivery of care on clinical trials (38). Study participation is now more often limited to sites that can contribute a specific number of patients (3). Some cooperative groups have implemented practice cases, or dummy runs (DR), to try to increase rates of compliance with protocol RT, with early data suggesting DR participation significantly increases the likelihood of successful completion of subsequent QA procedures within the same or later trials (40). The decision to require successful completion of credentialing or other QA requires compromise between the spectrum of institutions that will be permitted to participate in the trial, and the uniformity and quality of the data to be collected (41). By definition, QA will constrain the participating institutions to those that can pass the requirements, which may reduce the number of patients enrolled (41). However, these institutions are more likely to comply with the protocol, achieve a lower rate of major deviations, and submit evaluable patient data (41,42). It also appears likely that participating in a clinical trial improves quality of RT delivered to patients off-protocol due to the training of personnel and institutional implementation of best practices (38,39).
In the tiered approach suggested by the NCI’s Working Group on RT QA, if the main trial objective necessitates advanced planning or RT techniques, more intense QA is required than a trial incorporating standard RT (8,38). For example, real-time rapid review may not be required for all protocols (39). A standardized submission process, automated where possible, that builds on participation in previous RT QA procedures would increase efficiency (38,39). Overburdening sites with requirements for data submission not directly related to study aims should be minimized (38). Implementation of appropriate levels of QA per study should also be guided by evidence-based predictors of RT quality, such as institutional accrual patterns and the local site’s QA results from previous trials.
Conclusions
It is challenging to draw definitive conclusions from the available literature due to differences in central review methodology, definitions of deviations, timing and blinding, median follow-up and statistical analysis. Although more data are required, current reports suggest that protocol-compliant RT tends to decrease failure rates and increase overall survival, and likely contributes to the ability of collected data to answer the central trial question.
Supplementary Material
Acknowledgments
Funding: Supported by NCI grants U24 CA81647, CA29511 and CA10953.
Footnotes
Conflict of Interest notification: There are no conflicts of interest to declare.
Presented in part at the International Conference on Translational Research, 27 Feb-2 Mar 2012, Geneva, CH.
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