| Literature DB >> 26860292 |
C van Loveren1, W van Palenstein Helderman2.
Abstract
AIM: This was to collect information for the 9th European Academy of Paediatric Dentistry Interim Seminar and Workshops to discuss the state of art on non-invasive caries therapy to be used if possible to formulate clinical guidelines by European experts in paediatric dentistryEntities:
Keywords: Caries; Cavitated lesions; Non-cavitated lesions; Non-invasive; Recall interval
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26860292 PMCID: PMC4766220 DOI: 10.1007/s40368-015-0219-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Arch Paediatr Dent ISSN: 1818-6300
The preventive dental programmes used in the study of Hausen et al. (2000)
| Basic programme (BP) | Intensive program (IP) |
|---|---|
| Duraphat 1×/year | Basic Programme |
| Fissure Sealants in deep fissures | + |
| Principles of good oral hygiene and diet were mentioned | Additional Duraphat varnish 1×/y |
| F-toothpaste 2×/day | All fissures sealed |
| No after-brush rinse | Intensive oral hygiene and dietary counselling. Xylitol chewing gum after meals |
| Dental floss 3×/week | |
| CHX-gel 2×/y (for children with ≥106 S.mutans/ml saliva) | |
| F-lozenges 4×/day |
Overview of the search strategy used in Pubmed
|
| ||
|---|---|---|
| #1 | (“Child” [Mesh] OR children[tiab] OR “Adolescent”[Mesh] OR adolescent[tiab]) | 2,723,693 |
| #2 | Non-operative[All Fields] AND (“therapy”[Subheading] OR “therapy”[All Fields] OR “treatment”[All Fields] OR “therapeutics”[MeSH Terms] OR “therapeutics”[All Fields]) AND (“dental caries”[MeSH Terms] OR (“dental”[All Fields] AND “caries”[All Fields]) OR “dental caries”[All Fields] OR “caries”[All Fields]) | 32 |
| #3 | Non-restorative[All Fields] AND (“therapy”[Subheading] OR “therapy”[All Fields] OR “treatment”[All Fields] OR “therapeutics”[MeSH Terms] OR “therapeutics”[All Fields]) AND (“dental caries”[MeSH Terms] OR (“dental”[All Fields] AND “caries”[All Fields]) OR “dental caries”[All Fields] OR “caries”[All Fields]) | 15 |
| #4 | Therapy/Broad[filter] AND dental caries prevention[tiab] | 254 |
| #5 | #4 AND #1 | 79 |
| #6 | Systematic[sb] AND dental caries prevention[tiab] | 14 |
| #7 | Systematic[sb] AND (“dental caries”[MeSH Terms] OR (“dental”[All Fields] AND “caries”[All Fields]) OR “dental caries”[All Fields] OR “caries”[All Fields]) AND (“prevention and control”[Subheading] OR (“prevention”[All Fields] AND “control”[All Fields]) OR “prevention and control”[All Fields] OR “prevention”[All Fields]) | 413 |
| #8 | #7AND #1 | 207 |
| #9 | Systematic[sb] AND caries management[tiab] | 27 |
| #10 | Therapy/Broad[filter] AND caries management[tiab] | 117 |
| #11 | #2 OR #3 OR #5 OR #6 OR #8 OR #9 OR #10 | 452 |
Overview of systematic reviews described by Mejàre et al. (2015) for the prevention of caries in primary and young permanent teeth
| Technology | Outcome | Effect | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fluoride toothpaste | Caries prevention | PF 24 %, 95 % CI 21 to 28 % | Ammari et al. ( |
| Supervised vs unsupervised (normally supervision by teachers) | PF 12 %, 95 %CI 0 to 21 % | Twetman et al. | |
| Concentration: 440-450 vs 1000–1250 ppm F- | PF 7 %, 95 % CI −9.5 to 24.8 % | Walsh et al. ( | |
| Fluoride varnish (risk of overestimation due to the limited number of studies) | Permanent dentition | PF 30 %, 95 % CI 0–69 %; | Petersson et al. |
| Primary dentition | PF 37 % 95 % CI 24 to 51 % | Marinho et al. ( | |
| Fluoride varnish application to children in school | No significant effect probably because the population with the greatest likelihood of decay did not consent to participate. | Hardman et al. | |
| Fluoride gel | PF 21 % 95 % CI 14 to 28 % | Marinho et al. ( | |
| Fluoride mouthrinse | Without background of F exposure | PF 29 % range 14 to 53 % | Twetman et al. ( |
| With background of F exposure | PF 6 % range 0 to 30 % | Twetman et al. | |
| Fluoride mouthrinses, gels or varnishes used in combination with toothpaste | PF 10 % 95 %CI 2 % to 17 % | Marinho et al. ( | |
| Water fluoridation | –5.0 % to 64 % (median 14.6 %) | McDonagh et al. | |
| Resin fissure sealants | At 2 years of follow-up | OR 0.12, 95 % CI 0.07 to 0.19 | Ahovuo-Saloranta et al. ( |
| At 48 to 54 months of follow-up | OR 0.21, 95 % CI 0.16 to 0.28 | Ahovuo-Saloranta et al. ( | |
| 1st molars | RR 0.67 95 % CI 0.55 to 0.83 | Mejàre et al. ( | |
| 2nd molars, premolars and primary molars | Incomplete evidence for a caries-preventive effect | Mejàre et al. ( | |
| Chlorhexidine | Evidence inconclusive | Twetman ( |
Clinical findings determining the individual disease management recall interval (Ng et al. 2012, 2014)
| Risk category | New clinical findings | Disease management return interval + fluoride varnish interval (months) |
|---|---|---|
| Low | (i) No disease indicators of caries | 6–12 |
| Medium | (i) No disease indicators* but has risk factors** | 3–6 |
| High | (i) Active caries (disease indicators present) | 1–3 |
* Examples of disease indicators including demineralisation, cavitated lesions, existing restorations, enamel defects, deep pits, and fissures
** Examples of risk factors including patient/maternal/family history of dental decay, plaque on teeth, and frequent snacks of sugars/cooked starch/sugared beverages
*** Examples of protective factors include fluoride exposure (topical and/or systemic) and xylitol
Gaps in knowledge concerning prevention and non-operative treatment of caries in primary and young permanent teeth. From Mejàre et al. (2015)
| Proper amount and level of ppm fluoride in tooth pastes for pre-school children related to the risk of fluorosis |
| Effect of toothpaste introduction by age, optimal brushing time and post-brushing behaviour |
| Additional effect of fluoride mouthrinse in high caries risk children/adolescents |
| Effect of fissure sealing of permanent molars in populations with low caries risk |
| Effect of fissure sealing of permanent molars with glass-ionomer cements |
| Effect of fissure sealing of permanent molars with composite resin-based FS compared with glass-ionomer cements |
| Effect of fissure sealing compared with fluoride varnish application |
| Effect of fluoride varnish in primary teeth |
| Effect of chlorhexidine |
| Effects of varying other agents and methods and effect of adding fluoride to food |
| Effects of information, professional programmes, routine dental examinations and counselling |
| Effect of non-operative methods to arrest or reverse non-cavitated caries lesions |
Overview of the system used in the Nexø-project to determine the individual recall interval
| Criteria | Judgment | Score |
|---|---|---|
| Cooperation | Inadequate | 2 points |
| Caries progression within the dentition | Yes | 2 points |
| Stage of eruption of permanent first/second molars | Partly erupted | 2 points |
| Occlusal surfaces of permanent first/second molars | Caries progression | 2 points |
Caries risk assessment and determination of recall intervals used by Abanto et al. (2015)
| Classification | Group | Clinical conditions | Recall interval |
|---|---|---|---|
| Low risk | A | Absence of cavitated caries lesions or restored teeth, without dental plaque, without gingivitis and/or without active initial caries lesions | Every 12 months |
| Moderate risk | B | Presence of restored teeth. Absence of dental plaque, gingivitis and/or absence of active initial caries lesions | Every 12 months |
| C | Presence of only inactive caries lesions associated with absence of dental plaque or gingivitis | Every 12 months | |
| High risk | D | Presence of dental plaque, gingivitis and/or presence of active initial caries lesions associated with absence of cavitated caries lesion or restored teeth | Every 8 months |
| E | Presence of one or more active cavitated caries lesions | Every 4 months |
Recall protocol for children and adolescents used by Evans and Dennison (2009)
| Caries risk | Monitoring lesion activity and patient behaviour |
|---|---|
| Low | 12 months after first visit |
| At-risk… | 3-monthly until lesion progression has arrested, i.e., evidence of (1) no extension of demineralisation or (2) that GIC sealant remains intact |
| At-risk… | 3-monthly for (1) F varnish and (2) oral hygiene monitoring until lesion progression has arrested and patient is reclassified as low risk |
| At-risk… | One week following first visit to review and coach tooth brushing competence |
* C2 Caries within the inner half of enamel
** C3 Caries involving the enamel dental junction
Fig. 1Flow diagram for non-invasive caries treatment