| Literature DB >> 24325757 |
Ana R Durão1, Pisha Pittayapat, Maria Ivete B Rockenbach, Raphael Olszewski, Suk Ng, Afonso P Ferreira, Reinhilde Jacobs.
Abstract
Lateral cephalometric radiography is commonly used as a standard tool in orthodontic assessment and treatment planning. The aim of this study was to evaluate the available scientific literature and existing evidence for the validation of using lateral cephalometric imaging for orthodontic treatment planning. The secondary objective was to determine the accuracy and reliability of this technique. We did not attempt to evaluate the value of this radiographic technique for other purposes. A literature search was performed using specific keywords on electronic databases: Ovid MEDLINE, Scopus and Web of Science. Two reviewers selected relevant articles, corresponding to predetermined inclusion criteria. The electronic search was followed by a hand search of the reference lists of relevant papers. Two reviewers assessed the level of evidence of relevant publications as high, moderate or low. Based on this, the evidence grade for diagnostic efficacy was rated as strong, moderately strong, limited or insufficient. The initial search revealed 784 articles listed in MEDLINE (Ovid), 1,034 in Scopus and 264 articles in the Web of Science. Only 17 articles met the inclusion criteria and were selected for qualitative synthesis. Results showed seven studies on the role of cephalometry in orthodontic treatment planning, eight concerning cephalometric measurements and landmark identification and two on cephalometric analysis. It is surprising that, notwithstanding the 968 articles published in peer-reviewed journals, scientific evidence on the usefulness of this radiographic technique in orthodontics is still lacking, with contradictory results. More rigorous research on a larger study population should be performed to achieve full evidence on this topic.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24325757 PMCID: PMC3882109 DOI: 10.1186/2196-1042-14-31
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prog Orthod ISSN: 1723-7785 Impact factor: 2.750
Figure 1Methodology followed in the article selection process (adapted from Moher et al.[20]).
Publications related to the importance and contribution of cephalometry on the orthodontic treatment planning
| Silling et al. [ | Assess usefulness of cephalometric analysis | 24 orthodontists | 6 patients | Stratified random design: 12 orthodontists analysed 6 patients with cephalograms and 12 orthodontists studied 6 patients without cephalogram | Not referred | Class I patient: disagreement on extractions, anchorage and growth potential decisions | Low |
| No need for lateral cephalometry, except for atypical class II division 1 patients, by 4 orthodontists | |||||||
| Anchorage problems SS between patients with and without lateral cephalogram | |||||||
| Bruks et al. [ | Evaluation of lateral cephalometric and panoramic radiography | 4 dentists and senior orthodontist | 70 patients | Clinical evaluations and treatment plan by 4 dentists: | Descriptive statistics and statistical analyses with computer software. Kruskal-Wallis test to evaluate differences between groups | Impact on diagnosis relating to the ordering sequence of cephalogram: first choice, 68%; second choice, 73%; third choice, 80% | Low |
| 1. Study casts + photographs | 93% of cases: same treatment plan before and after radiographic analysis | ||||||
| 2. Adding radiographs | |||||||
| Pae et al. [ | Examine the link between lateral cephalograms and occlusal trays | 16 orthodontists | 80 patients | T1: casts evaluated; T2 (1 week later): casts + lateral cephalograms | Rash model, regression plots, two-way ANOVA, | Class II division 2 patients: 126 extractions planned at T1; 80 at T2 | Moderate |
| A lateral cephalogram influenced degree of severity, but not the difficulty of treatment | |||||||
| Nijkamp et al. [ | Influence of lateral cephalometry on treatment plan | 10 post-graduatetrainees and 4 orthodontists | 48 patients | Randomised crossover design - T1: casts, T2 (1 month after): with lateral cephalometry and tracing, and T3 and T4 (repeated after 1 and 2 months) | Overall proportion of agreement | Consistency of treatment plan was NS between the use only of dental casts or with additional cephalometry | Low |
| Influence of cephalometrics on orthodontic treatment planning: NS | |||||||
| Devereux et al. [ | Influence of lateral cephalometry on treatment plan | 114 orthodontists | 6 patients | 3 groups: (a) no lateral cephalogram and tracings, (b) some with lateral cephalogram and tracings and (c) all with lateral cephalogram and tracings | Chi-square and binary logistic regression | Treatment plan changed for extraction pattern (42.9%), anchorage reinforcement (24%) and decision to extract (19.7%) | Low |
| Class I patient: lateral cephalogram less times ordered. Only patients where treatment plan changed after its analysis | |||||||
| NS impact of cephalometrics on treatment plan | |||||||
| Atchison et al. [ | Determine quantitatively the diagnosis and treatment plan information after radiograph evaluation | 39 orthodontists | 6 patients | A 2-h interview for diagnosis and treatment planning of 6 cases. Study cast, intra- and extra-oral photographs, tracing and clinical findings available. | Analysis of variance with repeated measures and covariance, homogeneity value and descriptive statistics | 98% of cases: at least one of the radiographs unproductive | Low |
| A radiograph only if judged helpful | 3/4 of radiographs did not provide information to change diagnosis and treatment plan | ||||||
| Atchison et al. [ | Identify selection criteria for ordering orthodontic radiographs | 39 orthodontists | 6 patients | A 2-h interview for diagnosis and treatment planning of 6 cases. Study cast, intra- and extra-oral photographs, tracing and clinical findings available | Not referred | 14.4% of radiographs ordered for skeletal relationship of the jaws | Low |
| Lateral cephalograms accounted for 34% of required information | |||||||
| 26% of all ordered radiographs produced modifications on diagnosis or treatment plan | |||||||
| Pretreatment lateral cephalogram required in all patients needing orthodontic treatment |
NS, non-significant.
Publications concerning landmark identification
| Baumrind and Frantz [ | Quantification of errors in landmark identification | 5 observers | 20 lateral skull radiographs | Observer identified 16 cephalometric landmarks on a transparent plastic template | Mean, standard deviation and standard errors | Least reliable landmarks: gonion and lower incisor apex | Moderate |
| Effects of errors on angular and linear measurements | |||||||
| Kvam and Krogstad [ | Evaluation of measurements in lateral cephalograms. | 18 observers | 3 lateral skull radiographs | Hand cephalometric analysis made by each participant, 8 angles measured | Mean and standard deviation | 16 out of 24 angular measurements: less variability in post-graduates than students | Low |
| Assess influence of knowledge and impact of angular errors | In 7 measurements, no difference was observed | ||||||
| Post-graduates' tracings used for diagnostic purposes | |||||||
| Standard deviation of students greater than post-graduates | |||||||
| Haynes and Chau [ | Evaluation of landmark identification on Delaire analysis | 2 observers | 28 lateral skull radiographs | Establish a co-ordinate system for measurement on tracings | Mean deviation | Intra-observer: NS differences between values of T1 and T2 tracings | Moderate |
| Comparison with data of conventional cephalometry | Radiographs were traced twice by each observer (3 to 4 weeks) | Inter-observer: differences between the averaged mean values on tracings were NS for either | |||||
| Ahlqvist et al. [ | Study the magnitude of projection errors on measurements in cephalometry | 1 observer | A patient was modelled | Computer software designed to allow movement of model on the 3 axes. The magnitude of errors was studied by a diagram | Measurement errors studied by a diagram with the relative length of distances between modelled landmarks | Less than 1% error on length measurements if head is rotated up to 5° | Low |
| Study the effects of incorrect patient position on linear measurements | Head rotated more than 5° the error is increased | ||||||
| Houston et al. [ | Evaluate errors at various stages of measurements in cephalometric radiograph | 4 observers | 24 lateral cephalograms | 2 radiographs of the same patient | Analysis of variance | Error variance is small (radiograph and tracing) when compared with the variance among groups | Moderate |
| Radiographs traced on acetate sheet by each observer at T1/T2 (1-week interval) | SNA has a higher tracing variance than SNB due to the difficulty to identify point A | ||||||
| Kamoen et al. [ | Determine errors involved in landmark identification and its consequence to treatment results | 4 observers | 50 lateral cephalograms | Items studied: (1) accuracy of digitiser, (2) intra- and inter-observer digitising errors and (3) intra- and inter-observer tracing errors | (1) Levene's test for homogeneity of variances, (2) one-way ANOVA and (3) Levene's test for homogeneity | (1) NS variances of co-ordinates for landmark at different positions on the digitiser. (2) NS intra- and inter-observer differences in digitisation. (3) S differences in landmarks and in the same landmark on different cephalograms and between observers | Moderate |
| Tng et al. [ | Evaluate the validity of dental and skeletal landmarks. Effect on angles and distances. | 1 observer | 2 lateral cephalograms of 30 dry skulls | Steel balls placed in 15 dental and skeletal landmarks | Mean and standard deviation | 7 out of 10 skeletal and 5 dental landmarks were NS ( | Moderate |
| Two radiographs taken with and without the markers and digitised. Measurements compared | 4 angles (SNA-SN/MnP, MxP/MnP and LI/MnP) and 3 distances (N-Me, MxP-Me and Lie to APg) were invalid ( | ||||||
| Major errors in angles with dental landmarks | |||||||
| Bourriau et al. [ | Analyse the influence of film-object distance and type of receptor on landmark identification | 53 orthodontists | 4 lateral cephalograms of the same patient | 19 cephalometric landmarks on each film | Mean | NS difference between 2 imaging receptors neither between 2 cephalograms achieved by 2 equipments ( | Low |
| 2 radiographs performed at an equipment with a 4-m arm and 2 in a 1.50-m arm equipment with 2 different imaging receptors (digital and indirect digital) | Results obtained by cephalometric analysis was judged: ‘very important’ for 20.5%, ‘important’ for 70%, ‘less important’ for 8% and ‘accessory’ for 1 participant |
NS, non-significant; S, significant.
Publications on cephalometric analysis
| De Abreu [ | Assessment criteria of unanimity for different cephalometric analyses | Not referred | 129 patients | Diagnosis performed based on Ricketts, Steiner, Cervera and Coutand cephalometric analyses | Not referred | 3 out of 61 cases with similar diagnosis. In 23 cases, 4 analyses achieved similar diagnosis. In 13 cases, 3 different diagnoses were obtained. In 8 cases, the diagnosis was different for class II and class III | Low |
| Abdullah et al. [ | Examine accuracy and precision of Steiner analysis for changes on ANB angle, the Pg-NB distance and upper and lower incisor positions | Different orthodontists (not reference to the number) | 275 patients | Radiographs traced and analysed by orthodontists according to the Steiner analysis | Paired | The predicted change in L1 (lower incisor) to NB was underestimated by 0.8 mm. Only the prediction for pogonion and NB showed improvement of the precision (30%) | Low |
| Radiographs at the end of treatment (T2) were traced by one observer |