Your tongue weight is leveraged by that long overhang, so the RV may not be as much over as you think. Most critical is the load on tires, as the axle has significant reserve and the rear springs are probably already supplemented by air springs on that year
If you have the OEM 225/75R16 load range E, your four rear tires can carry 9880 pounds at 80 PSI. Averaging over the four rear tires, you might be at most 5-7% over the tire ratings. That's within tire load safety margins, particularly in cool weather. Temperature is what makes a fabric body tire come apart (steel body plies are a different problem). Load, speed, road temperature all contribute to raising the tread temperature to the point of tread separation.
But that works both ways. The load and speed ratings are for a particular temperature, so that ytires can be "overloaded" on a very hot pavement even when loads are within tire ratings and tires properly inflated; that's when I slow down.
I am much more comfortable being 5-10% underloaded, than 5-10% overloaded, and would work to get those loads down. This is not easy on our max-size slideout carrying Winnebagos, I find managing weight a problem also with the shorter two-slide 29G, even though I don't put an additional weight on my bumper to load down the rear and lift the front.
Or I would look into one step up in tire size, 235/85R16 gets you to 10,592 pounds (XPS Rib). The higher profile keeps the dual spacing reasonable, although the larger diameter means higher effective gearing. Ford used to put this size on the SRW E-Series as an option, using the same wheels.
More extreme, an increase in wheel size so that I could upgrade to higher load range tires. 215/75R17.5 LRG will carry 11800 at 80 PSI, 12960 at 90 PSI, 14100 at 100 PSI. Those are for Michelin XZE2, probably the best multipurpose tire you can get for 17.5 wheels. You would be in trouble on axle and spring ratings long before you overloaded the tires.
The pressure you are running up front might accelerate tire wear there, because the OEM size carries maximum axle weight when inflated to 65 PSI. Much more pressure reduces the size of the contact patch to the center of the tread. I find 75-80 PSI changes front tire behavior enough to make the front end feel slippery.
Tom Test
Itasca Spirit 29B