| Literature DB >> 29186805 |
Betsy Joseph1, Presanthila Janam2, Subhash Narayanan3, Sukumaran Anil4.
Abstract
The aim of this systematic review was to investigate whether antimicrobial photodynamic therapy (aPDT) as either a primary mode of treatment or an adjunct to non-surgical treatment was more effective than scaling and root planing (SRP) alone in treating chronic periodontitis in terms of clinical attachment level (CAL) gain and probing depth (PD) reduction. The focused question was developed using the Patient, Intervention, Comparison, and Outcome (PICO) format, and two authors independently searched the Medline, EMBASE, Cochrane Library, Web of Science, Google Scholar, and Scopus databases for relevant studies from January 2008 to December 2016. Twenty studies included in this systematic review were randomized clinical trials (RCTs) or quasi-RCTs of aPDT compared to placebo, no intervention, or non-surgical treatment in an adult population. Basic study characteristics, photosensitizing agents and wavelengths used in aPDT, frequency of aPDT application, effect of aPDT on clinical parameters, antimicrobial effect of aPDT in chronic periodontitis, effect of immunological parameters following aPDT and patient-based outcome measures were collected from the studies. Although there was a wide range of heterogeneity in the included studied, they all indicated that aPDT has the potential to be an effective adjunct in the treatment of chronic periodontitis. Long-term, multicenter studies with larger sample sizes are needed before aPDT can be recommended as an effective treatment modality.Entities:
Keywords: bacterial biofilm; chronic periodontitis; photochemotherapy; photodynamic therapy; systematic review
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29186805 PMCID: PMC5745461 DOI: 10.3390/biom7040079
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomolecules ISSN: 2218-273X
Figure 1Decision tree showing the selection of articles included in the review. aPDT: antimicrobial photodynamic therapy; PDT: photodynamic therapy.
Studies on aPDT in chronic periodontitis with clinical attachment level (CAL) or probing depth (PD) as the primary outcome measures.
| Author | Sample Size (Male/Female) and Mean Age | Study design; Power of Study; Case Allotment | Outcome Measured | Treatment Arms | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kolbe et al. [ | 22 (10/12) | Split-mouth | Clinical, Microbiology (polymerase chain reaction(PCR)); Pain perception (Visual Analogue Scale (VAS)) | Scaling and Root Planing (SRP) | All therapies promoted similar improvements in clinical parameters. The aPDT protocol presented inferior frequency of |
| Carvalho et al. [ | 34 (21/13) | Parallel | Pocket probing depth (PPD), CAL, bleeding on probing (BoP) and plaque index (PI) | SRP | Both treatments resulted in significant clinical improvement in patients with residual periodontal pockets. We did not find any additional significant benefit of PDT in terms of PPD, CAL, BoP, or pathogen level reduction. |
| Betsy et al. [ | 90 (39/51) | Parallel | Clinical and halitosis as perceived by patient | SRP | PD improved after three months and halitosis after one month. Statistically significant improvements in the gingival index and gingival bleeding index were observed for the test group after two weeks and one month of aPDT, respectively. aPDT is a beneficial adjunct to SRP in the non-surgical treatment and management of chronic periodontitis in the short term. |
| Luchesi et al. [ | 37 | Parallel | Clinical, Microbiology (PCR); Immunology (granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), interferon (IFN), Interleukin (IL)-6 and Interleukin-8 levels) | SRP + aPDT | Clinical parameters improved after both therapies. Did not promote clinical benefits for class II furcations; however, there were advantages in terms of the local levels of cytokines and periodontopathogens reduction. |
| Dilsiz et al. [ | 24 (10/14) | Split-mouth | SRP | Improvement in PD and CAL gain following treatment. Additional use of potassium titanyl phosphate (KTP) laser was found to be better in improving clinical parameters than conventional periodontal therapy of deeper pockets. | |
| Alwaeli et al. [ | 21 (7/14) | Split-mouth | SRP | Significant improvement in all evaluated clinical parameters for at least one year. There were significantly greater reductions and gains for SRP + aPDT than for SRP at all three-time points. aPDT as an adjunctive therapy to SRP represents a promising therapeutic concept for persistent periodontitis. | |
| Campanile et al. [ | 27 (14/13) | Parallel | Clinical, Microbiology (PCR); Pain perception (VAS); Immunology (C-reactive protein, Serum amyloid A, fibrinogen, procalcitonin, and α-2 macroglobulin) | aPDT twice in one week | Significant PD and BoP reduction after three months when aPDT was administered twice a week. C-reactive protein was significantly lower only when the laser had been activated twice. |
| Bassir et al. [ | 16 (8/8) | Split-mouth | Clinical | LED | No additional benefit was noticed with administration of photoactivated disinfection (PAD) using LED in patients with moderate to severe chronic periodontitis. |
| Campos et al. [ | 15 (8/7) | Split-mouth | Clinical | SRP | aPDT as an adjunctive to mechanical debridement demonstrated additional clinical benefits for residual pockets in single-rooted teeth and may be an alternative therapeutic strategy in supportive periodontal maintenance. |
| Balata et al. [ | 22 (8/14) | Split-mouth | Clinical | SRP | Both approaches resulted in significant clinical improvement in the treatment of severe chronic periodontitis. aPDT did not provide any additional benefit. |
| Barekdar et al. [ | 22 (12/10) | Split-mouth | Clinical | SRP | A greater reduction of the PD was achieved by a combination of SRP/aPDT; therefore, aPDT is suitable as an adjuvant therapy. |
| Giannopoulou et al. [ | 32 (23/9) | Split-mouth | Clinical, Immunology (IL-17, basic fibroblast growth factor, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GCSF), macrophage inflammatory protein (MIP)) | SRP | No significant differences were observed among the three treatment modalities at any time point for any biochemical parameter or enhanced expression of inflammatory mediators. |
| Cappuyns et al. [ | 32 (23/9) | Split-mouth | Clinical, Microbiology (RNA probes); Pain perception (VAS) | SRP | At the end of six months, statistically significant PD and BoP reductions were recorded. Frequencies of three periodontal pathogens were significantly lower in groups with aPDT- and SRP-treated than in diode soft laser-treated quadrants after 14 days. However, the same was not noticed at the end of two and six months. aPDT resulted in a reduction in the number of pockets after six months. |
| Lui et al. [ | 24 (10/14) | Split-mouth | Clinical, Immunology (IL-1b levels in gingival crevicular fluid) | SRP | The test teeth achieved greater reductions in the percentage of sites with bleeding on probing and in mean probing depth at one month compared with the control teeth and also greater reduction of interleukin (IL)-1b levels in gingival crevicular fluid at 1 week than did the control sites. No significant differences in periodontal parameters were found between the test and control teeth at three months. |
| Theodoro et al. [ | 33 (12/21) | Split-mouth | Clinical, Microbiology (PCR) | SRP | All treatment groups showed an improvement in all clinical parameters and a significant reduction in the proportion of sites positive for periodontopathogens at 60, 90, and 180 days compared to baseline. None of the periodontal parameters showed a significant difference among the groups. At 180 days, aPDT treatment led to a significant reduction in the percentage of sites positive for all bacteria compared to SRP alone. |
| Sigush et al. [ | 24 (7/17) | Parallel | Clinical, Microbiology (PCR) | SRP + PS | Significant reductions in reddening, BoP, and mean PD and CAL were observed during the observation period and with respect to controls. Appropriate to reduce periodontal inflammation and to successfully treat infection with |
| Ruhling et al. [ | 60 | Parallel | SRP | aPDT was not found to be better than routine mechanical debridement in the management of persistent pockets, but still maybe considered a valuable therapeutic option. | |
| Christodoulides et al. [ | 24 (13/11) | Parallel | SRP | Additional application of a single episode of aPDT to SRP failed to result in an additional improvement in terms of PD reduction and CAL gain, but resulted in a significantly higher reduction in bleeding scores compared to SRP alone. | |
| Braun et al. [ | 20 (9/11) | Split-mouth | SRP | Improvement in clinical parameters with the use of adjunctive aPDT as compared to subgingival debridement. | |
| Chondros et al. [ | 24 (10/14) | Parallel | Clinical, Microbiology (PCR) | SRP | Additional application of a single episode of aPDT to SRP failed to result in additional improvement. Significantly higher reduction of bleeding scores in test group. At three months and six months, a statistically significantly higher improvement of BoP was found in the test group. At three months after therapy, the microbiological analysis showed a statistically significant reduction of |
The sample size and method used to derive samples in the selected studies.
| Author | Sample Size (Male/Female) | Power of the Study | Type of Randomization | Type of Blinding | Case Allotment | Whether Intention-to-Treat (ITT) Analysis Done |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kolbe et al. [ | 22 (10/12) | 83% (CAL) | Not mentioned | Double-blinded | Computer-generated | Yes |
| Carvalho et al. [ | 34 (21/13) | 90% (CAL) | Block randomization (size = 4) | Double -blinded | Computer-generated | Yes |
| Betsy et al. [ | 90 (39/51) | 80% (PD) | Block randomization (size = 4) | Double-blinded | Tippet’s 2-digit number table | Yes |
| Luchesi et al. [ | 37 | 86% (CAL) | Not mentioned | Double-blinded | Computer-generated | Yes |
| Dilsiz et al. [ | 24 (10/14) | Not given | Not mentioned | Double-blinded | Computer-generated | Yes |
| Alwaeli et al. [ | 21 (7/14) | Not given | Not mentioned | Double-blinded | Computer-generated | No |
| Campanile et al. [ | 27 (14/13) | 80% (PD) | Not mentioned | Single-blinded | Computer-generated | No |
| Bassir et al. [ | 16 (8/8) | 80% (PD) | Block randomization (size = 1) | Double-blinded | Computer-generated | Not mentioned |
| Campos et al. [ | 15 | 80% (PD) | Not mentioned | Double-blinded | Computer-generated | Not mentioned |
| Balata et al. [ | 22 (8/14) | 80% (CAL) | Not mentioned | Not given | Coin toss | Yes |
| Barekdar et al. [ | 22 (12/10) | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | Single-blinded | Not mentioned | Yes |
| Giannopoulou et al. [ | 32 (23/9) | 80% (PD) | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | Computer-generated | No |
| Cappuyns et al. [ | 32 (23/9) | 80% (PD) | Not mentioned | Single-blinded | Computer-generated | No |
| Lui et al. [ | 24 (10/14) | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | Single-blinded | Not mentioned | Yes |
| Theodoro et al. [ | 33 (12/21) | 81% (CAL) | Not mentioned | Single-blinded | Computer-generated | Yes |
| Sigush et al. [ | 24 (7/17) | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | Not given | Drawing lots | Not mentioned |
| Ruhing et al. [ | 60 | 80% (PD) | Not mentioned | Single-blinded | Computer-generated | No |
| Christodoulides et al. [ | 24 (13/11) | 80% (PD) | Not mentioned | Not given | Coin toss | Yes |
| Braun et al. [ | 20 (9/11) | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | Single-blinded | Not mentioned | Yes |
| Chondros et al. [ | 24 (10/14) | 80% (PD) | Not mentioned | Single-blinded | Coin toss | Yes |
Laser parameters of the included studies.
| Author | Photosensitizer Concentration | Resident Time of Photosensitizer | Laser Application Time | Laser Wavelength | Laser Output | Fiber Optic Tip Diameter | Laser Energy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kolbe et al. [ | Methylene blue 10 mg/mL | 1 min | 1 min | 660 nm | 60 mw/cm2 | Not mentioned | 129 J |
| Carvalho et al. [ | Methylene blue 0.01% | 5 min | 1 min | 660 nm | 40 mw/cm2 | Not mentioned | 90 J |
| Betsy et al. [ | Methylene blue 10 mg/mL | 3 min | 1 min | 655 nm | 1 W/cm2 | 200 μm | Not mentioned |
| Luchesi et al. [ | Methylene blue 10 mg/mL | 1 min | 1 min | 660 nm | 60 mw/cm2 | 600 μm | 129 J |
| Dilsiz et al. [ | Methylene blue (25 g) 1% | 3 min | 1 min | 808 nm | 100 mw/cm2 | 300 μm | 6 J |
| Alwaeli et al. [ | Phenothiazine chloride | 1 min | 1 min | 660 nm | 100 mw/cm2 | Not mentioned | Not mentioned |
| Campanile et al. [ | Methylene blue | 1 min | 1 min | 670 nm | 280 mw/cm2 | Not mentioned | Not mentioned |
| Balata et al. [ | Methylene blue 0.01% | 2 min | 1 min | 660 nm | 100 mw/cm2 | Not mentioned | 320 J |
| Bassir et al. [ | Toluidine blue O 0.1 mg/mL | 3 min | 1 min | 635 nm | 2 W/cm2 | Not mentioned | Not mentioned |
| Barekdar et al. [ | Methylene blue 0.01% | 2 min | 1 min | 670 nm | 150 mw/cm2 | 600 μm | Not mentioned |
| Giannelli et al. [ | Methylene blue 0.03% | 5 min | 1 min | 635 nm | 100 mw/cm2 | 600 μm | 3.8 J |
| Giannopoulou et al. [ | Phenothiazine chloride; 100 μg/mL | 3 min | 1 min | 660 nm | 100 mw/cm2 | 750 μm | 3 J |
| Cappuyns et al. [ | Phenothiazine chloride; 100 μg/mL | 1 min | 1 min | 660 nm | 40 mw/cm2 | Not mentioned | Not mentioned |
| Lui et al. [ | Methylene blue 1% | 3 min | 30 s | 940 nm | 1.5 W/cm2 | Not mentioned | 4 J |
| Theodoro et al. [ | Toluidine blue O 100 μg/mL | 1 min | 150 s | 660 nm | 400 mw/cm2 | Not mentioned | Not mentioned |
| Sigush et al. [ | Phenothiazine | 1 min | 1 min | 660 nm | 60 mw/cm2 | 0.6 mm | Not mentioned |
| Ruhing et al. [ | Tolonium chloride 5% | Not mentioned | 1 min | 635 nm | 100 mw/cm2 | Not mentioned | Not mentioned |
| Christodoulides et al. [ | Phenothiazine | 3 min | 1 min | 670 nm | 75 mw/cm2 | Not mentioned | Not mentioned |
| Braun et al. [ | Phenothiazine | 3 min | 1 min | 660 nm | 100 mw/cm2 | Not mentioned | Not mentioned |
| Chondros et al. [ | Phenothiazine | Not mentioned | 1 min | 670 nm | 75 mw/cm2 | Not mentioned | Not mentioned |
Studies reporting microbiologic, immunologic, and patient-based outcomes along with clinical parameters.
| Author | Sample Size | Outcome Measured | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kolbe et al. [ | 22 | Microbiology(PCR); Pain perception (VAS) | Similar improvements noticed in clinical parameters with all treatments. PDT protocol presented inferior frequency of |
| Carvalho et al. [ | 34 | Microbiology(PCR); Pocket probing depth (PPD), CAL, BoP and PI | All treatments resulted in significant clinical improvement in patients with residual periodontal pockets. PDT failed to show superior clinical results and pathogen load reduction in persistent pockets, compared to supragingival plaque control. |
| Betsy et al. [ | 90 | Halitosis as perceived by patient | Changes in PD after three months and halitosis after one month. Gingival index and gingival bleeding index improved significantly in the test group after two weeks and one month of aPDT. As an adjunct to SRP, aPDT shows effectiveness in the short term for managing chronic periodontitis. |
| Luchesi et al. [ | 37 | Microbiology (PCR); Immunology (GM-CSF, IFN-c, IL-6 and IL-8 levels) | Clinical parameters improved after both therapies. At six months, real-time PCR evaluation showed a decrease in |
| Campanile et al. [ | 27 | Microbiology (PCR); Pain perception (VAS); Immunology (C-reactive protein, Serum amyloid A, fibrinogen, procalcitonin, and α-2 macroglobulin) | Detection frequencies of the studied microorganisms at >1000 and >100,000 cells/mL did not change significantly from baseline to months 3 or 6 in any group. Significant PD and BoP reduction after three months when aPDT given twice a week. C-reactive protein was significantly lower only if the laser had been activated twice. |
| Cappuyns et al. [ | 32 | Microbiology (RNA probes); Pain perception (VAS) | Statistically significant PD and BoP reduction was seen at six months. Frequencies of three microorganisms were significantly lower in aPDT- and SRP-treated than in diode soft laser-treated quadrants after 14 days, but not at months 2 and 6. aPDT resulted in fewer residual pockets after six months. |
| Giannopoulou et al. [ | 32 | Immunology (IL-17, basic fibroblast growth factor, granulocyte colony-stimulating factor, and macrophage inflammatory protein 1-a) | No significant differences were observed among the three treatment modalities at any time point for any biochemical parameter or enhanced expression of inflammatory mediators. |
| Theodoro et al. [ | 33 | Microbiology (PCR) | All treatment groups showed an improvement in all clinical parameters, and a significant reduction in the proportion of sites positive for periodontopathogens at 60, 90, and 180 d compared to the baseline. None of the periodontal parameters showed a significant difference among the groups. At 180 days, PDT treatment led to a significant reduction in the percentage of sites positive for all bacteria compared to SRP alone. |
| Lui et al. [ | 24 | Immunology (IL-1b levels in gingival crevicular fluid) | A significant decrease in gingival crevicular fluid volume was observed in both groups at one week, with a further decrease at one month in the test sites. The test sites showed a greater reduction of IL-1b levels in gingival crevicular fluid at one week than the control sites. No significant differences in periodontal parameters were found between the test and control teeth at three months. |
| Sigush et al. [ | 24 | Microbiology (PCR) | BoP, mean PD, and mean CAL showed improvement in the test group as compared to controls. aPDT may be used to manage periodontal inflammation and infection with |
| Chondros et al. [ | 24 | Microbiology (PCR) | Application of a single episode of aPDT to SRP failed to result in an additional improvement. Significantly higher reduction of bleeding scores in test group. At three and six months, a statistically significantly higher improvement of BoP was found in the test group. At three months after therapy, the microbiological analysis showed a statistically significant reduction of |