| Literature DB >> 31619413 |
Justin E Bekelman1, Hien Lu2, Stephanie Pugh3, Kaysee Baker4, Christine D Berg5, Amy Barrington de González5, Lior Z Braunstein6, Walter Bosch7, Cynthia Chauhan8, Susan Ellenberg9, L Christine Fang10, Gary M Freedman2, Elizabeth A Hahn11, B G Haffty12, Atif J Khan6, Rachel B Jimenez13, Christy Kesslering14, Bonnie Ky15, Choonsik Lee5, Hsiao-Ming Lu13, Mark V Mishra4, C Daniel Mullins16, Robert W Mutter17, Suneel Nagda2, Mark Pankuch14, Simon N Powell6, Fred W Prior18, Karen Schupak6, Alphonse G Taghian13, J Ben Wilkinson19, Shannon M MacDonald13, Oren Cahlon6.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: A broad range of stakeholders have called for randomised evidence on the potential clinical benefits and harms of proton therapy, a type of radiation therapy, for patients with breast cancer. Radiation therapy is an important component of curative treatment, reducing cancer recurrence and extending survival. Compared with photon therapy, the international treatment standard, proton therapy reduces incidental radiation to the heart. Our overall objective is to evaluate whether the differences between proton and photon therapy cardiac radiation dose distributions lead to meaningful reductions in cardiac morbidity and mortality after treatment for breast cancer.Entities:
Keywords: breast tumours; clinical trials; protocols & guidelines; radiation oncology
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31619413 PMCID: PMC6797426 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-025556
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Conceptual framework for randomised pragmatic clinical trial of proton versus photon therapy for locally advanced breast: generating patient centric, real-word evidence.
Key elements of the RadComp pragmatic approach to study design
| Domain | Typical explanatory RCT | RadComp Pragmatic RCT |
| Blinding | Open label | Open label |
| Participant eligibility | Highly selected (avoid diluting effect) | Little selection beyond the clinical indication for RT |
| Intervention flexibility | Standardised, inflexible treatment guidelines | Flexible treatment guidelines, promote local care standards |
| Practitioner expertise | Expert subspecialists at elite academic settings | Academic and community settings, real-world care |
| Follow-up | Frequent research visits, more extensive than routine care | Annual research visits, tied to routine care; engage patients |
| Primary outcome | Clinically meaningful, often surrogate | Clinically meaningful, patient-centric MCE and HRQOL |
| Event adjudication | Variable | Independent, blinded, centralised primary outcome adjudication |
| Adherence | Stringent for both patient and provider | Relaxed, usual care, best practice recommendations |
| Analysis | Intention to treat | Intention to treat |
| Relevance to practice | Indirect: trial design ≠ needs of stakeholders | Direct: trial design = needs of patients and stakeholders |
HRQOL, health-related quality of life; MCE, major cardiovascular event; RadComp, Radiotherapy Comparative Effectiveness; RCT, randomised controlled trial; RT, radiation therapy.
Summary of inclusion and exclusion criteria for the RadComp trial
| Inclusion criteria |
Age ≥21 years. Females or males diagnosed with pathologically (histologically) proven invasive mammary carcinoma (ductal, lobular or other) of the breast who have undergone either mastectomy or lumpectomy/local excision with any type of axillary or internal mammary node chain surgery or sampling or who have had a local recurrence. Must be proceeding with breast/chest wall and nodal radiation therapy including internal mammary node treatment. Confirmation that participant’s health insurance or an alternative source will pay for the cost of proton or photon therapy treatment on the study. |
| Exclusion criteria |
Definitive clinical or radiological evidence of metastatic disease. Prior radiotherapy to the ipsilateral chest wall, breast or thorax. Scleroderma. |
RadComp, Radiotherapy Comparative Effectiveness.
Figure 2Study stratification schema.