Yes, you can do this on any set of tables. But you do not get an answer that you should use, unless you are very far away from any limits. That is why the Wheel was invented.
This paper explains how to validly use the RDP with multilevel dives. The same ideas will apply to all tables, but there is no way to test them because there is no equivalent to the Wheel for those other tables. Sorry, I cannot attach the paper (too large), but you can get it on Rubicon with this link.
The PADI Wheel uses shorter no decompression limits for multi-level dives, which is the major difference between the Wheel and the PADI RDP.
However, after we started diving with the Wheel in the late 1980s some of us who liked to play with tables figured out that if you apply the same NDLs and rules to the table, you got the same results.
The caution is that you also have to follow the same set of rules as you would for the Wheel, in terms of only one segment deeper than 80 ft with subsequent segments at least 20 ft shallower, mandatory safety stops (which in effect then are decompression stops) and specific surface intervals for repetitive multi-level dives.
If you look at the unintentional deco segments of the table, you'll notice that a 3 minute or 5 minute decompression stops cover a fair degree of sins in terms of exceeding the NDL's, and in that regard those safety stops are essential to doing multi-level dives safely with the wheel, and it was something we regarded as essential when doing multi-level dives on the RDP as well.
Now, to be fair, we were also divers who learned on the old PADI table which used the old US Navy limits before the newer PADI RDP came along with shorter NDLs, so we were a little less leery about pushing the limits of the more conservative RDP - along with being young, inexperienced and perhaps less prudent than we should have been, so take it all with a grain of salt.