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The radiotherapy quality assurance gap among phase III cancer clinical trials

Authors :
Claus Rödel
Paige L. Nitsch
Ramez Kouzy
M.F. McAleer
Emmanouil Fokas
Roshal R. Patel
Anuja Jhingran
Cullen M. Taniguchi
Albert C. Koong
Bruce D. Minsky
Rebecca M. Howell
Stephen F Kry
Prajnan Das
Ethan B. Ludmir
Kelsey L. Corrigan
C. David Fuller
Joseph Abi Jaoude
Source :
Radiother Oncol
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

Purpose Quality assurance (QA) practices improve the quality level of oncology trials by ensuring that the protocol is followed and the results are valid and reproducible. This study investigated the utilization of QA among randomized controlled trials that involve radiotherapy (RT). Methods and Materials We searched ClinicalTrials.gov in February 2020 for all phase III oncology randomized clinical trials (RCTs). These trials were screened for RT-specific RCTs that had published primary trial results. Information regarding QA in each trial was collected from the study publications and trial protocol if available. Two individuals independently performed trial screening and data collection. Pearson’s Chi-square tests analyses were used to assess factors that were associated with QA inclusion in RT trials. Results Forty-two RCTs with RT as the primary intervention or as a mandatory component of the protocol were analyzed; the earliest was started in 1994 and one trial was still active though not recruiting. Twenty-nine (69%) trials mandated RT quality assurance (RTQA) practices as part of the trial protocol, with 19 (45%) trials requiring institutional credentialing. Twenty-one (50%) trials published protocol deviation outcomes. Clinical trials involving advanced radiation techniques (IMRT, VMAT, SRS, SBRT) did not include more RTQA than trials without these advanced techniques (73% vs. 65%, p=0.55). Trials that reported protocol deviation outcomes were associated with mandating RTQA in their protocols as compared to trials that did not report these outcomes (100% vs. 38%, p Conclusions There is a lack of RTQA utilization and transparency in RT clinical trials. It is imperative for RT trials to include increased QA for safe, consistent, and high-quality RT planning and delivery.

Details

ISSN :
01678140
Volume :
166
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Radiotherapy and Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....016f7ff4ac250797791337b0269caa91
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.radonc.2021.11.018