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Dysphagia-optimised intensity-modulated radiotherapy versus standard intensity-modulated radiotherapy in patients with head and neck cancer (DARS): a phase 3, multicentre, randomised, controlled trial

Dysphagia-optimised intensity-modulated radiotherapy versus standard intensity-modulated radiotherapy in patients with head and neck cancer (DARS): a phase 3, multicentre, randomised, controlled trial
Dysphagia-optimised intensity-modulated radiotherapy versus standard intensity-modulated radiotherapy in patients with head and neck cancer (DARS): a phase 3, multicentre, randomised, controlled trial
Background: most newly diagnosed oropharyngeal and hypopharyngeal cancers are treated with chemoradiotherapy with curative intent but at the consequence of adverse effects on quality of life. We aimed to investigate if dysphagia-optimised intensity-modulated radiotherapy (DO-IMRT) reduced radiation dose to the dysphagia and aspiration related structures and improved swallowing function compared with standard IMRT.

Methods: DARS was a parallel-group, phase 3, multicentre, randomised, controlled trial done in 22 radiotherapy centres in Ireland and the UK. Participants were aged 18 years and older, had T1–4, N0–3, M0 oropharyngeal or hypopharyngeal cancer, a WHO performance status of 0 or 1, and no pre-existing swallowing dysfunction. Participants were centrally randomly assigned (1:1) using a minimisation algorithm (balancing factors: centre, chemotherapy use, tumour type, American Joint Committee on Cancer tumour stage) to receive DO-IMRT or standard IMRT. Participants and speech language therapists were masked to treatment allocation. Radiotherapy was given in 30 fractions over 6 weeks. Dose was 65 Gy to primary and nodal tumour and 54 Gy to remaining pharyngeal subsite and nodal areas at risk of microscopic disease. For DO-IMRT, the volume of the superior and middle pharyngeal constrictor muscle or inferior pharyngeal constrictor muscle lying outside the high-dose target volume had a mandatory 50 Gy mean dose constraint. The primary endpoint was MD Anderson Dysphagia Inventory (MDADI) composite score 12 months after radiotherapy, analysed in the modified intention-to-treat population that included only patients who completed a 12-month assessment; safety was assessed in all randomly assigned patients who received at least one fraction of radiotherapy. The study is registered with the ISRCTN registry, ISRCTN25458988, and is complete.

Findings: from June 24, 2016, to April 27, 2018, 118 patients were registered, 112 of whom were randomly assigned (56 to each treatment group). 22 (20%) participants were female and 90 (80%) were male; median age was 57 years (IQR 52–62). Median follow-up was 39·5 months (IQR 37·8–50·0). Patients in the DO-IMRT group had significantly higher MDADI composite scores at 12 months than patients in the standard IMRT group (mean score 77·7 [SD 16·1] vs 70·6 [17·3]; mean difference 7·2 [95% CI 0·4–13·9]; p=0·037). 25 serious adverse events (16 serious adverse events assessed as unrelated to study treatment [nine in the DO-IMRT group and seven in the standard IMRT group] and nine serious adverse reactions [two vs seven]) were reported in 23 patients. The most common grade 3–4 late adverse events were hearing impairment (nine [16%] of 55 in the DO-IMRT group vs seven [13%] of 55 in the standard IMRT group), dry mouth (three [5%] vs eight [15%]), and dysphagia (three [5%] vs eight [15%]). There were no treatment-related deaths.

Interpretation: our findings suggest that DO-IMRT improves patient-reported swallowing function compared with standard IMRT. DO-IMRT should be considered a new standard of care for patients receiving radiotherapy for pharyngeal cancers.

Funding: Cancer Research UK.
1470-2045
868-880
Nutting, Christopher
1315fdb5-545b-4e12-b4f1-c1e4ca3e96d1
Finneran, Laura
e6b193d7-8327-4f3b-94b4-4f27ead5c0eb
Roe, Justin
9b0887a2-2eb3-46c5-bf68-f9d3dae8e583
Sydenham, Mark A
48ada6e4-1dcc-4dd7-8cfb-86dc54438a94
Beasley, Matthew
8d906a3d-4dcf-4ce8-81cd-82ca1ba0dfeb
Bhide, Shree
e0996315-6663-4a46-a3ae-c98e944987ab
Boon, Cheng
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Cook, Audrey
7b78f009-0997-4998-9261-68d42274211d
Winton, Emma De
dafff085-203f-4b45-8040-35fd092e7ed7
Emson, Marie
0620cf13-ab94-4691-956f-fc455c11a691
Foran, Bernadette
3323ff61-7733-4e71-80b8-a3fe608a1ce0
Frogley, Robert
c25f3ab1-7bbf-4fc9-8425-94b6afe38320
Petkar, Imran
ff72211e-a355-4cb4-9d9f-50d512883f34
Pettit, Laura
cea265c5-8de4-4f09-8dfa-aaf6c589f03e
Rooney, Keith
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Roques, Tom
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Srinivasan, Devraj
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Tyler, Justine
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Hall, Emma
c0b0a284-935e-468d-80d2-a30c067ed0b3
Christian, J.
55bf518c-410d-429b-a598-316014880d33
et al.
on behalf of the DARS Trialist Group
Nutting, Christopher
1315fdb5-545b-4e12-b4f1-c1e4ca3e96d1
Finneran, Laura
e6b193d7-8327-4f3b-94b4-4f27ead5c0eb
Roe, Justin
9b0887a2-2eb3-46c5-bf68-f9d3dae8e583
Sydenham, Mark A
48ada6e4-1dcc-4dd7-8cfb-86dc54438a94
Beasley, Matthew
8d906a3d-4dcf-4ce8-81cd-82ca1ba0dfeb
Bhide, Shree
e0996315-6663-4a46-a3ae-c98e944987ab
Boon, Cheng
80353a10-2534-403e-ad48-d09da3877c13
Cook, Audrey
7b78f009-0997-4998-9261-68d42274211d
Winton, Emma De
dafff085-203f-4b45-8040-35fd092e7ed7
Emson, Marie
0620cf13-ab94-4691-956f-fc455c11a691
Foran, Bernadette
3323ff61-7733-4e71-80b8-a3fe608a1ce0
Frogley, Robert
c25f3ab1-7bbf-4fc9-8425-94b6afe38320
Petkar, Imran
ff72211e-a355-4cb4-9d9f-50d512883f34
Pettit, Laura
cea265c5-8de4-4f09-8dfa-aaf6c589f03e
Rooney, Keith
29f7a5cc-d57e-4d73-bc57-90655e4fb341
Roques, Tom
5efd381b-89da-46ed-a003-20266c1686ec
Srinivasan, Devraj
03034cc4-7ab3-4d02-8172-e9c5512c2428
Tyler, Justine
99ddca51-e12a-4d9c-88d2-58159dd14715
Hall, Emma
c0b0a284-935e-468d-80d2-a30c067ed0b3
Christian, J.
55bf518c-410d-429b-a598-316014880d33

Nutting, Christopher, Finneran, Laura and Roe, Justin , et al. and on behalf of the DARS Trialist Group (2023) Dysphagia-optimised intensity-modulated radiotherapy versus standard intensity-modulated radiotherapy in patients with head and neck cancer (DARS): a phase 3, multicentre, randomised, controlled trial. The Lancet Oncology, 24 (8), 868-880. (doi:10.1016/s1470-2045(23)00265-6).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: most newly diagnosed oropharyngeal and hypopharyngeal cancers are treated with chemoradiotherapy with curative intent but at the consequence of adverse effects on quality of life. We aimed to investigate if dysphagia-optimised intensity-modulated radiotherapy (DO-IMRT) reduced radiation dose to the dysphagia and aspiration related structures and improved swallowing function compared with standard IMRT.

Methods: DARS was a parallel-group, phase 3, multicentre, randomised, controlled trial done in 22 radiotherapy centres in Ireland and the UK. Participants were aged 18 years and older, had T1–4, N0–3, M0 oropharyngeal or hypopharyngeal cancer, a WHO performance status of 0 or 1, and no pre-existing swallowing dysfunction. Participants were centrally randomly assigned (1:1) using a minimisation algorithm (balancing factors: centre, chemotherapy use, tumour type, American Joint Committee on Cancer tumour stage) to receive DO-IMRT or standard IMRT. Participants and speech language therapists were masked to treatment allocation. Radiotherapy was given in 30 fractions over 6 weeks. Dose was 65 Gy to primary and nodal tumour and 54 Gy to remaining pharyngeal subsite and nodal areas at risk of microscopic disease. For DO-IMRT, the volume of the superior and middle pharyngeal constrictor muscle or inferior pharyngeal constrictor muscle lying outside the high-dose target volume had a mandatory 50 Gy mean dose constraint. The primary endpoint was MD Anderson Dysphagia Inventory (MDADI) composite score 12 months after radiotherapy, analysed in the modified intention-to-treat population that included only patients who completed a 12-month assessment; safety was assessed in all randomly assigned patients who received at least one fraction of radiotherapy. The study is registered with the ISRCTN registry, ISRCTN25458988, and is complete.

Findings: from June 24, 2016, to April 27, 2018, 118 patients were registered, 112 of whom were randomly assigned (56 to each treatment group). 22 (20%) participants were female and 90 (80%) were male; median age was 57 years (IQR 52–62). Median follow-up was 39·5 months (IQR 37·8–50·0). Patients in the DO-IMRT group had significantly higher MDADI composite scores at 12 months than patients in the standard IMRT group (mean score 77·7 [SD 16·1] vs 70·6 [17·3]; mean difference 7·2 [95% CI 0·4–13·9]; p=0·037). 25 serious adverse events (16 serious adverse events assessed as unrelated to study treatment [nine in the DO-IMRT group and seven in the standard IMRT group] and nine serious adverse reactions [two vs seven]) were reported in 23 patients. The most common grade 3–4 late adverse events were hearing impairment (nine [16%] of 55 in the DO-IMRT group vs seven [13%] of 55 in the standard IMRT group), dry mouth (three [5%] vs eight [15%]), and dysphagia (three [5%] vs eight [15%]). There were no treatment-related deaths.

Interpretation: our findings suggest that DO-IMRT improves patient-reported swallowing function compared with standard IMRT. DO-IMRT should be considered a new standard of care for patients receiving radiotherapy for pharyngeal cancers.

Funding: Cancer Research UK.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 6 July 2023
Published date: 1 August 2023

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Local EPrints ID: 488245
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/488245
ISSN: 1470-2045
PURE UUID: 6735e3d7-9bd0-49d8-b52b-a2e80ca6f82e

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Date deposited: 19 Mar 2024 17:37
Last modified: 22 Mar 2024 19:03

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Contributors

Author: Christopher Nutting
Author: Laura Finneran
Author: Justin Roe
Author: Mark A Sydenham
Author: Matthew Beasley
Author: Shree Bhide
Author: Cheng Boon
Author: Audrey Cook
Author: Emma De Winton
Author: Marie Emson
Author: Bernadette Foran
Author: Robert Frogley
Author: Imran Petkar
Author: Laura Pettit
Author: Keith Rooney
Author: Tom Roques
Author: Devraj Srinivasan
Author: Justine Tyler
Author: Emma Hall
Author: J. Christian
Corporate Author: et al.
Corporate Author: on behalf of the DARS Trialist Group

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