Dose-escalated adaptive radiotherapy for bladder cancer: results of the phase 2 RAIDER randomised controlled trial
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Authors
Huddart, R.Hafeez, S.
Griffin, C.
Choudhury, Ananya
Foroudi, F.
Syndikus, I.
Hindson, B.
Webster, A.
McNair, H.
Birtle, A.
Varughese, M.
Henry, A.
McLaren, D. B.
Parikh, O.
Nikapota, A.
Tang, C.
Patel, E.
Miles, E.
Warren-Oseni, K.
Kron, T.
Hill, C.
Philipps, L.
Vassallo-Bonner, C.
Cheung, K. C.
Gribble, H.
Lewis, R.
Hall, E.
Affiliation
The Christie NHS Foundation Trust, The Christie, Manchester, UK.Issue Date
2025
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BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Delivering radiotherapy to the bladder is challenging as it is a mobile, deformable structure. Dose-escalated adaptive image-guided radiotherapy could improve outcomes. RAIDER aimed to demonstrate the safety of such a schedule. METHODS: RAIDER is an international phase 2 noncomparative randomised controlled trial (ISRCTN26779187). Patients with unifocal T2-T4a urothelial bladder cancer were randomised (1:1:2) to standard whole bladder radiotherapy (WBRT), standard-dose adaptive radiotherapy (SART), or dose-escalated adaptive radiotherapy (DART). Two fractionation (f) schedules recruited independently. WBRT and SART dose was 55 Gy/20f or 64 Gy/32f, and DART dose was 60 Gy/20f or 70 Gy/32f. For SART and DART, a radiotherapy plan (small, medium, or large) was chosen daily. The primary endpoint was the proportion of patients with radiotherapy-related late Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events grade ≥3 toxicity; the trial was designed to rule out >20% toxicity with DART. KEY FINDINGS AND LIMITATIONS: A total of 345 patients were randomised between October 2015 and April 2020: 41/46 WBRT, 41/46 SART, and 81/90 DART patients in the 20f/32f cohorts, respectively. The median age was 72/73 yr; 78%/85% had T2 tumours, 46%/52% had neoadjuvant chemotherapy, and 70%/71% had radiosensitising therapy. The median follow-up was 42.1/38.2 mo. Sixty-six of 77 (86%) 20f and 74 of 82 (90%) 32f participants planned for DART met the mandatory medium plan dose constraints. Radiotherapy-related grade ≥3 toxicity was reported in one of 58 patients (90% confidence interval [CI] 0.1, 7.9) with 20f DART and zero of 56 patients with 32f DART. Two-year overall survival was 77% (95% CI 69, 82) for WBRT + SART and 80% (95% CI 73, 85) for DART (hazard ratio = 0.84, 95% CI 0.59, 1.21, p = 0.4). Thirteen of 345 (3.8%) participants had salvage cystectomy. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS: Grade ≥3 late toxicity was low. DART was safe and feasible to deliver, meeting preset toxicity thresholds. Disease-related outcomes are promising for dose-escalated treatments, with a low salvage cystectomy rate and overall survival similar to that seen in cystectomy cohorts.Citation
Huddart R, Hafeez S, Griffin C, Choudhury A, Foroudi F, Syndikus I, et al. Dose-escalated Adaptive Radiotherapy for Bladder Cancer: Results of the Phase 2 RAIDER Randomised Controlled Trial. Eur Urol. 2025 Jan;87(1):60-70. PubMed PMID: 39379236. Epub 2024/10/09. eng.Journal
European UrologyDOI
10.1016/j.eururo.2024.09.006PubMed ID
39379236Additional Links
https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eururo.2024.09.006Type
ArticleLanguage
enae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1016/j.eururo.2024.09.006
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