| Literature DB >> 30799516 |
Marietta Krüsi1, Theodore Eliades1, Spyridon N Papageorgiou2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The aim of the current systematic review was to compare the clinical effects of bone-borne or hybrid tooth-bone-borne rapid maxillary expansion (RME) with conventional tooth-borne RME in the treatment of maxillary deficiency.Entities:
Keywords: Adverse effects; Clinical trials; Effectiveness; Maxillary expansion; Meta-analysis; Orthodontics; Skeletal anchorage; Systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30799516 PMCID: PMC6387979 DOI: 10.1186/s40510-019-0261-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prog Orthod ISSN: 1723-7785 Impact factor: 2.750
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram for identification and selection of eligible trials
Characteristics of included randomized trials pertaining to setting, patients, and intervention
| Study | Design; Setting; Country$ | Patients (M/F); age | Intervention; duration# | Activation protocol |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bazargani [ | RCT; Clinic; SWE | EG1: 19 (11/8); 9.7 | EG1: TB RME; NR | 2×/day until upper palatal molar cusps touch lower molar buccal cusps |
| Canan [ | RCT; Uni; TUR | EG1: 16 (8/8); 12.6 | EG1: TB RME; 13.3 days | 2×/day |
| Celenk-Koca [ | RCT; Pract; NLD | EG1: 20 (8/12); 13.8 | EG1: TB RME; 19.7 days | 2×/day until upper palatal molar cusps touch lower molar buccal cusps |
| Feldmann [ | RCT; Clinic; SWE | EG1: 25 (12/13); 9.7 | EG1: TB RME; NR | 2×/day until upper palatal molar cusps touch lower molar buccal cusps |
| Gunyuz Toklu [ | RCT; Uni; TUR | EG1: 13 (5/8); 14.3 | EG1: TB RME; 19.2 days | 2×/day until upper palatal molar cusps touch lower molar buccal cusps |
| Lagravère 2009 [ | RCT; Uni; CAN | EG1: 20 (5/15); 14.1 | EG1: TB RME; NR | 2×/day for DME (or 1×/2 days for the SME) until overcorrection |
BB bone-borne, CG control group without expansion, EG experimental group with expansion, F female, Hybr. hybrid (tooth-bone-borne), RCT randomized clinical trial, HME hybrid (skeletally/dentally) anchored maxillary expansion, M male, NR not reported, Pract practice, RME rapid maxillary expansion, SME skeletally anchored maxillary expansion, TB tooth-borne, Uni university
#Duration of active transverse expansion in weeks
$Countries are given with their ISO-3 code
†Including the publications Lagravère 2010 [46], Lagravère 2013 [47], Kabalan 2015 [48], Stepanko 2016 [49] and the dissertations Lagravère 2009 [45], Forst 2015 [36]
Characteristics of included randomized trials pertaining to follow-up and outcome
| Study | Follow-up | Method/outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Bazargani [ | Post-exp | Rhinomanometry |
| Canan [ | • Post-exp | CBCT |
| Celenk-Koca [ | • 6.0 months post-exp | CBCT |
| Feldmann [ | 1st/4th exp day | Questionnaire |
| Gunyuz Toklu [ | 3.0 mos post-exp | CBCT |
| Lagravère 2009 [ | • Post-exp | CBCT |
CBCT cone beam computed tomography, Exp expansion, I incisor, IMW intermolar width, IP1W inter-(first)-premolar width, M molar, P1 first premolar, P2 second premolar
†Including the publications Lagravère 2010 [46], Lagravère 2013 [47], Kabalan 2015 [48], Stepanko 2016 [49] and the dissertations Lagravère 2009 [45], Forst 2015 [36]
Fig. 2Risk of bias summary for included randomized trials with the Cochrane tool
Results of random effects meta-analyses performed from randomized trials comparing tooth-borne rapid maxillary expansion with either bone-borne or hybrid (tooth-bone-borne) rapid maxillary expansion
| Experimental | Timing | Outcome | Trials | MD | 95% CI |
| 95% PrI | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bone-borne | Pst-Exp | Intermolar width (crown) | 2 | − 0.09 | − 0.34, 0.16 | 0.46 | 0% (0%, 98%) | 0 (0, 8.14) | NC |
| Bone-borne | Pst-Exp | Inter-1st-premolar width (crown) | 2 | − 0.71 | − 2.70, 1.27 | 0.48 | 91% (41%, 100%) | 1.88 (0.12, 258.72) | NC |
| Bone-borne | Pst-Exp | Inclination 1st molar (left) | 2 | − 2.93 | − 7.87, 2.01 | 0.25 | 83% (0%, NC) | 10.59 (0, NC) | NC |
| Bone-borne | Pst-Exp | Inclination 1st molar (right) | 2 | − 1.47 | − 3.90, 0.95 | 0.23 | 0% (0%, 98%) | 0 (0, 189.07) | NC |
| Bone-borne | Pst-Exp | Inclination 1st premolar (left) | 2 | − 2.49 | − 5.19, 0.22 | 0.07 | 60% (0%, 100%) | 2.31 (0, 483.98) | NC |
| Bone-borne | Pst-Exp | Inclination 1st premolar (right) | 2 | − 4.05 | − 5.97, − 2.13 | < 0.001 | 0% (0%, 98%) | 0 (0, 93.81) | NC |
| Bone-borne | Reten | Intermolar width (crown) | 3 | 0.15 | − 0.27, 0.56 | 0.49 | 0% (0%, 88%) | 0 (0, 1.23) | − 2.54, 2.83 |
| Bone-borne | Reten | Inter-1st-premolar width (crown) | 3 | − 0.66 | − 1.90, 0.58 | 0.30 | 77% (0%, 99%) | 0.88 (0, 22.64) | − 15.06, 13.74 |
| Bone-borne | Reten | Inclination 1st molar (left) | 2 | − 1.89 | − 9.48, 5.70 | 0.63 | 87% (10%, NC) | 26.04 (0.45, NC) | NC |
| Bone-borne | Reten | Inclination 1st molar (right) | 2 | − 0.20 | − 3.91, 3.51 | 0.92 | 59% (0%, 100%) | 4.33 (0, 913.80) | NC |
| Bone-borne | Reten | Inclination 1st premolar (left) | 2 | − 2.38 | − 9.53, 4.76 | 0.51 | 90% (31%, NC) | 23.94 (1.24, NC) | NC |
| Bone-borne | Reten | Inclination 1st premolar (right) | 2 | − 0.77 | − 3.02, 1.48 | 0.50 | 0% (0%, 98%) | 0 (0, 154.35) | NC |
| Bone-borne | Reten | Nasal cavity width | 2 | *0.41 | *− 0.03, 0.84 | 0.07 | 0% (0%, 99%) | 0 (0, 7.60) | NC |
| Hybrid | Reten | Intercanine width (crown) | 2 | − 0.22 | − 0.98, 0.55 | 0.58 | 36% (0%, 100%) | 0.16 (0, 55.23) | NC |
| Hybrid | Reten | Intermolar width (crown) | 2 | 0.18 | − 0.40, 0.76 | 0.55 | 0% (0%, 98%) | 0 (0, 28.03) | NC |
| Hybrid | Reten | Inter-1st-premolar width (crown) | 2 | − 1.96 | − 6.18, 2.27 | 0.36 | 89% (27%, NC) | 8.36 (0.38, NC) | NC |
| Hybrid | Reten | Inclination 1st molar (left) | 2 | − 1.29 | − 3.61, 1.03 | 0.28 | 0% (0%, 99%) | 0 (0, 341.30) | NC |
| Hybrid | Reten | Inclination 1st molar (right) | 2 | − 1.12 | − 6.96, 4.72 | 0.71 | 66% (0%, NC) | 11.75 (0, NC) | NC |
| Hybrid | Reten | Inclination 1st premolar (left) | 2 | − 3.97 | − 7.08, − 0.86 | 0.01 | 49% (0%, 100%) | 2.70 (0, 685.54) | NC |
| Hybrid | Reten | Inclination 1st premolar (right) | 2 | − 0.79 | − 3.18, 1.60 | 0.52 | 0% (0%, 98%) | 0 (0, 181.80) | NC |
CI confidence interval, MD mean difference, NC non-calculable, PrI predictive interval, Pst-Exp post expansion, Reten post retention period (at least 3 months)
*Pertains to standardized mean difference, as two similar outcomes were pooled together: nasal cavity width at orbita and nasal cavity width at the 1st premolar
Summary of findings table according to the GRADE approach for the comparison of bone-borne versus tooth-borne rapid maxillary expansion
| Anticipated absolute effectsa (95% CI) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Outcome | Tooth-borne RMEb | Bone-borne RME | Difference | Quality of the | What happens |
| Suture opening at 1st premolar | 1.3 mm | – | 2.3 mm more | ⊕⊕⊕⃝○ moderated | Probably greater sutural opening with bone-borne RME |
| Suture opening at 1st molar | 1.1 mm | – | 2.0 mm more | ⊕⊕⊕○⃝ moderated | Probably greater sutural opening with bone-borne RME |
| Buccal tipping of 1st premolar | 3.9° | – | 2.4° less | ⊕⃝⃝⃝○○○ very lowd, e, f | Little to no difference in premolar buccal tipping |
| Buccal tipping of 1st molar | 5.7° | – | 1.9° less | ⊕⃝⃝⃝○○○ very lowd, e, f | Little to no difference in molar buccal tipping |
| Nasal cavity width at 1st premolar/orbita$ | 1.8 mm$ | – | 0.7 mm more(0.1 less to 1.4 more) | ⊕⊕⃝⃝○○ lowd, e | Little to no difference in nasal cavity width |
| Root resorption volume at 1st molar | 49.3 mm3 | – | 17.8 mm3 less | ⊕⊕⃝⃝○○ lowd, e | Little to no difference in root resorption volume |
Bone-borne versus tooth-borne rapid maxillary expansion
Population and intervention: adolescent or adult patients with skeletal maxillary deficit
Settings: university clinics, private practices, and clinics (Canada, Netherlands, Sweden, Turkey)
CI confidence interval, GRADE Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation
aThe basis for the risk in the control group (e.g., the median control group risk across studies) is provided in footnotes. The risk in the intervention group (and its 95% confidence interval) is based on the assumed risk in the comparison group and the relative effect of the intervention (and its 95% CI)
bResponse in the control group is based on average response of included trials
cStarts from “high,” due to the inclusion of randomized studies
dDowngraded by one point due to imprecision, as the optimal information size was judged not to be met
eDowngraded by one point for risk of bias (lack of blind outcome assessment)
fDowngraded one for inconsistency (I2 > 75%)
$Standardized mean difference was used for the meta-analysis and was back-translated to natural units based on the data from the Celenk-Koca 2018 [30] trial
Summary of findings table according to the GRADE approach for the comparison of hybrid (tooth-bone-borne) versus tooth-borne rapid maxillary expansion
| Outcome | Anticipated absolute effectsa (95% CI) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Relative effect | Tooth-borne RMEb | Hybrid (tooth-bone-borne) RME | Difference | Quality of the evidence (GRADE)c | What happens | |
| External maxillary width at 1st molar | – | 2.0 mm | – | 0.6 mm more | ⊕⃝⃝⃝○○○ lowd, e | Little to no difference in external maxillary width at 1st molars |
| Buccal tipping of 1st premolar | – | 3.7° | – | 4.0° less | ⊕⊕⃝⃝○○ moderatee, f | Probably less premolar tipping with hybrid RME |
| Buccal tipping of 1st molar | – | 4.3° | – | 1.3° less | ⊕⊕⃝⃝○○ moderatee, f | Little to no difference in molar buccal tipping |
| Nasal resistance | – | 0.9 Pa s/cm3 | – | 0.2 Pa s/cm3 less(0 to 0.4 less) | ⊕⊕⊕⃝○ moderatee | Probably lower nasal resistance with hybrid RME |
| Analgesic use on 1st expansion day | RR 0.8 | 36.0% | 28.1% | 7.9% less | moderatee | Little to no difference in analgesic use |
Bone-borne versus tooth-borne rapid maxillary expansion
Population and intervention: adolescent or adult patients with skeletal maxillary deficit
Settings: university clinics, private practices, and clinics (Canada, Netherlands, Sweden, Turkey)
CI confidence interval, GRADE Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation
aThe basis for the risk in the control group (e.g., the median control group risk across studies) is provided in footnotes. The risk in the intervention group (and its 95% confidence interval) is based on the assumed risk in the comparison group and the relative effect of the intervention (and its 95% CI)
bResponse in the control group is based on average response of included trials
cStarts from “high,” due to the inclusion of randomized studies
dDowngraded by two points due to risk of bias (potentially inadequate randomization and lack of blind outcome assessment)
eDowngraded by one point due to imprecision, as the optimal information size was judged not to be met
fDowngraded by one point for risk of bias (lack of blind outcome assessment)