| Literature DB >> 31349691 |
Nadine Fraihat1, Saba Madae'en2, Zsuzsa Bencze3, Adrienn Herczeg3, Orsolya Varga3.
Abstract
The objective of this study was to evaluate the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of oral-health promotion programs (OHPPs) aiming to improve children's knowledge of favorable oral health behavior to lower decayed/-missing/-filled teeth (DMFT) while reducing the financial cost on health institutions. An electronic search was performed in seven databases. Studies were restricted to human interventions published in English. The search study followed the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA) guidelines, and the risk of bias was assessed based on the Drummonds Checklist. A total of 1072 references were found. Among these, 19 full texts were included. Most studies had a strong quality. The overall pooled impact of OHPPs estimates children suffering from DMFT/S to have 81% lower odds of participating in OHPP (95% CI 61-90%, I2: 98.3%, p = 0). Furthermore, the program was shown to be effective at lowering the cost in 97 out of 100 OHPPs (95% CI 89-99%, I2: 99%, p = 0). Three subgroups analyses (age groups, study countries, studies of the last five years) were performed to evaluate the influence modification on the pooled effect. A comprehensive analysis of the OHPPs confirmed a reduction effect on child DMFT, hence, lowering the financial burden of dental-care treatment on health institutions.Entities:
Keywords: Decayed Missing Filled Teeth (DMFT); Incremental Cost Effectiveness Ratio (ICER); Oral Health Promotion Programs (OHPP); cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA)
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31349691 PMCID: PMC6696287 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16152668
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
The general characteristics of the included studies.
| S.no | Lead Author | Year | Country | Study Design | Participant | Mean Age | Intervention | Main Conclusion | Source of Funding | Quality Assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Hietasalo, P. [ | 2009 | Finland | Trial-Based | 497 children who had at least one active | 11.5 | 1. Designed a centered regimen for caries | The experimental regimen would be more cost-effective than standard care if the follow-up the period had been longer | Finnish Dental Society Apollonia, the Yrjo Jahnsson Foundation | Strong Quality |
| 2. | Kowash, M.B. [ | 2006 | United Kingdom | Model-Based | 7000 infants aged 8 months | 0.6666 | Long-term dental health education program through home visits | Dental Health Education program of home visits with mothers of young infants to prevent early childhood caries gave better benefit-costs and cost-effectiveness ratios than other preventive programs. | British National Health Service (UK) fees | Strong Quality |
| 3. | Pukallus, M. [ | 2013 | Australia | Model-Based | Mothers in the intervention group were telephoned when their children were aged approximately 6, 12 and 18 months | 1 | A telephone Oral Health prevention program | A telephone intervention likely to generate considerable benefits and cost savings to the public dental health service in disadvantaged communities | Australian Centre for Health Services Innovation | Strong Quality |
| 4. | Anopa, Y. [ | 2015 | United Kingdom | Model-Based | Hypothetical cohorts of 1000 children aged 5 years | 5 | Nursery tooth brushing program | Tooth brushing program represents a preventative spend of both reduced costs and health gains in child oral health outcomes. | E-Government through NHS payments | Strong Quality |
| 5. | Blaikie, D.C. [ | 1977 | Australia | Model-Based | Community School Children | NA | Free for an Oral screening program compared with Regular community dental health branch | Dental Health Branch was more cost-effective than the proposed fee-for-service alternative. | Department of Public Health ledger listings | Strong Quality |
| 6. | Tickle, M. [ | 2016 | United Kingdom | Trial-Based | Children aged 2–3 years, who were caries free at baseline | 3.1 | 1. Oral Health advice | The intervention was unlikely to be cost-effective in terms of either keeping children caries free. | The National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment program | Strong Quality |
| 7. | Quinonez, R.B [ | 2006 | United Kingdom | Model-Based | Application of universal fluoride varnish at 9, 18, 24, and 36 months the cycles extended to 42 months to account for benefits incurred after the last Fluoride varnish application at the 36-month well-child visit. | 2.1250 | Application of fluoride varnish at different times. | Fluoride varnish used in the medical setting is effective in reducing ECC in low-income populations but is not cost saving in the first 42 months of life. | Supported by grant (R01DE013949) National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research | Strong Quality |
| 8. | Reiss, M.L. [ | 1976 | United States of America | Trial-Based | 51 children who needed immediate dental care (determined by dental screening at a local school). | 4 | 1. Oral Health Note. | The 3 Prompt and 1 Prompt plus | Not Reported | Moderate Quality |
| 9. | Donaldson, C. [ | 1986 | United Kingdom | Trial-Based | 161 children who entered the program and attended continuously for a period of 4 years. | 7 | Personal health education, oral fluoride supplements applications of acid phosphate fluoride gel and pit and fissure sealing. | There is a need for further study measuring dental outcome which combine aspects of both the quality and length of life of teeth. | Chief Scientist Office of the Scottish Home and Health Department. | Strong Quality |
| 10. | O’Neill, C. [ | 2017 | Ireland | Trial-Based | 1096 children aged 2 to 3 year attending general practice assigned in 2-arm parallel group to measure the cost-effectiveness of caries prevention program | 2.5 | 1. Fluoride varnish | This trial raises concerns about the cost-effectiveness of a fluoride-based intervention delivered at the practice level in the context of a state-funded dental service | A state-funded dental service | Strong Quality |
| 11. | Koh, R. [ | 2015 | Australia | Trial-Based | 296 Children aged 6–60 months. 188 home visit interventions; 58 telephone contact interventions; 40 reference controls: usual home care. | 3.25 | A home visit relative to a telephone call Oral Health advises | Both the home visits and telephone calls were highly cost-effective | National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia | Moderate Quality |
| 12. | Samnaliev, M. [ | 2015 | United States of America | Model-Based | 518 Children younger than 60 months with active caries or a history of caries | 2.5 | Oral Disease management program | The program appears cost-effective and has the potential to reduce health care costs | Health care costs were obtained from the hospital finance department. And non-health care costs were estimated through a parent survey | Strong Quality |
| 13. | Plonka, K.A. [ | 2013 | Australia | Model-Based | 325 children were recruited from community health centers, randomly assigned to receive either a home visit or telephone call. | 0.1150 | Oral Health education by the home visit and Telephone call. | Home visits and telephone contacts conducted every 6 months from birth are effective in reducing ECC prevalence by 24 months. | The Dental Board of Queensland and the | Moderate Quality |
| 14. | Stearns, S.C. [ | 2012 | United States of America | Model-Based | 209,285 Medicaid enrolled children at age 6 months. | 3.25 | 1. Screening and risk assessment | The program is cost-effective with 95% certainty if Medicaid is willing to pay | Lead Author is independent of any commercial funder | Strong Quality |
| 15. | Takeuchi, R. [ | 2017 | Japan | Model-Based | Tongan schoolchildren | 12 | 1. Enforcement of lectures application of fluoride. | The materials for fluoride mouth rinsing and Tooth brushes are lower than for the treatment of caries. | These activities were supported by the JICA | Moderate Quality |
| 16. | Davies, G.M [ | 2003 | United Kingdom | Trial-Based | A cohort of children aged 12 months was recruited from a high caries risk population in 9 health districts. | 3 | Children received toothpaste 1450 ppm fluoride | The program achieved a significant caries reduction in children who received 1450 fluoride toothpaste. | Not Reported | Moderate Quality |
| 17. | Folayan, M.O. [ | 2016 | Nigeria | Model-Based | Children living with their biological parents or legal guardians | 6.5 | Dental health education program of home visits | The use of a combination of fluoridated toothpaste and twice-daily tooth brushing had the largest effect on reducing the chance for caries in children resident in Ile-Ife, Nigeria. | Not Reported | Moderate Quality |
| 18. | Lai, B. [ | 2018 | Singapore | Trial-Based | 90 children and their caregivers participated in the program, and 64 children were recruited as the control group. | 2 | Oral program includes tooth brushing, fluoride use and topical fluoride varnish | The odds of severe early childhood caries in the control group were 3 times higher than that for the intervention group | Not Reported | Moderate Quality |
| 19. | Gibbs, L. [ | 2015 | Australia | Trial-Based | Families with 1–4-year-old children, 197children in the intervention group and 144 children in the control group | 2.5 | 1. Community education sessions | The Teeth Tales intervention was | Australian Research Council Linkage grant | Moderate Quality |
NHS = National Health Service. ECC = early-childhood caries.
Cost-Effectiveness Outcomes of the standardized included studies.
| Author | Economic Study Design | Year to Which Costs Applied | Currency Used to Which Cost Applied | Outcome: Cost-Effectiveness of the Standardized Year 2015 and USD Currency | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cost of Study | Cost of Study Control | Incremental Cost | Type of the Outcomes | Effect of Intervention | Effect of Control | |ICER| | Cost Saving | Indirect Cost | Total Program Cost | ||||
| Tickle, M. [ | Trial-Based | 2015 | £ | $242.76 | $75.15 | $167.61 | DMFT | 1.15 | 1.64 | 342.06 | NA | $1341.93 | $2872.75 |
| Anopa, Y. [ | Model Based | 2009 | £ | $24.6 | $235.23 | (−) $210.63 | DMFT | 0.08332 | NA | 1621.7 | $737,453.43 | NA | $274,762.01 |
| Koh R. [ | Trial-Based | 2013 | $ | $354,983.72 | $185,039.65 | (−) $169,944.07 | QALY | 540 | 547 | 24,277.7 | $317,174.06 | $2197.64 | $747,775.07 |
| Reiss, M.L. [ | Trial-Based | 1976 | $ | $180.95 | $65.65 | $115.30 | Dental Visits | 0.846483 | NA | 32.7 | $208.28 | $122.76 | $66.19 |
| Kowash, M.B. [ | Model Based | 1995 | £ | $10,046.06 | $46,670.13 | (−) $36.63 | DMFT | 0.29 | 1.75 | 25,085 | $56,716.19 | NA | $20,093.67 |
| Pukallus, M. [ | Model Based | 2012 | £ | $31,059.39 | $140,146.01 | (−) $109,086.63 | No. of caries teeth prevented | 11 | 54 | 2537 | $109,086.63 | NA | $31,059.39 |
| Quinonez, R.B. [ | Model Based | 2003 | $ | $234 | $219.92 | $14.08 | cavity free months | 31.49 | 29.97 | 9.26 | NA | NA | $3816.75 |
| Davies, G.M. [ | Trial-Based | 1992 | £ | $232,664.49 | NA | NA | DMFT | 2.15 | 2.57 | 61.728 | $1845.89 | $16,111.88 | $755,737.89 |
| Hietasalo, P. [ | Trial-Based | 2004 | € | $602.74 | $518.36 | $84.38 | DMFS | 2.56 | 4.6 | 41.363 | $48.56 | NA | $278,717.29 |
| Takeuchi, R. [ | Model Based | 2006 | $ | $2806.96 | NA | NA | DMFT | 2.2 | 4.86 | NA | NA | $52.91 | $2859.86 |
| Folayan, M.O. [ | Model Based | 2015 | ₦ | NA | NA | NA | Probability of less cost | 98.60% | 61.50% | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Samnaliev, M. [ | Model Based | 2011 | $ | $71.65 | $8901.61 | (−) $8829.96 | Caries% | 4.15% | 22.50% | 48,119 | $952.54 | $120.73 | $8969.92 |
| Plonka, K.A. [ | Model Based | NA | $ | NA | NA | NA | Caries% | 2% | 15% | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Lai, B. [ | Trial-Based | 2012 | $ | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Blaikie, D.C. [ | Model Based | 1976 | $ | $13,578,891.38 | $12,640,528.99 | $938,362.38 | Cost-effectiveness ratios | 1.07 | 1.47 | 563,175 | $6,179,117.15 | $278,349.66 | NA |
| O’Neill, C. [ | Trial-Based | 2014 | £ | $1601.31 | $1271.45 | $329.86 | DMFS | 2.6 | 3.9 | 253.7 | $329.86 | $2429.37 | $2872.75 |
| Stearns, S.C. [ | Model Based | 2006 | $ | $64.44 | $336.01 | (−) $271.58 | No. of IMB visits | 4 | 0 | 68 | $39.55 | NA | $40.96 |
| Gibbs, L. [ | Trial-Based | 2012 | $ AU | NA | NA | NA | Percentage of not having debris | 56% | Referent | NA | NA | NA | $296,651.45 |
| Donaldson, C. [ | Trial-Based | 1974 | £ | NA | NA | $346.01 | DMFT | 0.37 | 2.47 | 3.4 | NA | NA | NA |
ICER: incremental cost-effectiveness ratios, DMFT: decayed missing filled teeth, QALY: quality-adjusted life year, No. of IMB: number of “into the mouth of babes” program visits.
The Drummond checklist for the risk of bias assessment of the trial-based economic evaluation studies.
| Drummond Checklist/Study Authors | Anopa, Y. [ | Blaikie, D.C. [ | Kowash, M.B. [ | Stearns, S.C. [ | Samnaliev, M. [ | Pukallus, M. [ | Quinoez, R.B. [ | Plonka, K.A. [ | Folayan, M.O. [ | Takeuchi, R. [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Was a Well-Defined Question Posed in an Answerable Form? | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes |
| Was a Comprehensive Description of | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | no |
| Was the Effectiveness of the Program Established? | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | no | yes | yes | yes |
| Were All the Important and Relevant | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | no | NA | no |
| Were Costs and Consequences | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | NA | NA | yes |
| Were Costs and Consequences Valued | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | NA | NA | yes |
| Were Costs and Consequences | yes | yes | no | yes | NA | yes | yes | NA | NA | NA |
| Was an Incremental Analysis of Costs | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | NA | NA | NA |
| Was Allowance Made for Uncertainty | no | no | no | yes | NA | no | no | NA | NA | NA |
| Did the Presentation and Discussion | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | Yes |
| Score | 9 from 10 | 9 from 10 | 7 form 10 | 10 from 10 | 8 from 10 | 9 from 10 | 8 from 10 | 4 from 10 | 4 from 10 | 5 from 10 |
The Drummond checklist for the risk of bias assessment of the model-based economic evaluation studies.
| Drummond Checklist/Study Authors | Donaldson, C. [ | Davies, G.M. [ | Koh R. [ | Hietasalo P. [ | O’Neill, C. [ | Tickle, M. [ | Reiss, M.L. [ | Lai, B. [ | Gibbs, L. [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Was a Well-Defined Question Posed in an Answerable Form? | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes |
| Was a Comprehensive Description of | yes | no | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | no |
| Was the Effectiveness of the Program Established? | yes | yes | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | yes |
| Were All the Important and Relevant | no | no | yes | yes | yes | yes | no | NA | yes |
| Were Costs and Consequences | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | NA | yes |
| Were Costs and Consequences Valued | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | NA | yes |
| Were Costs and Consequences | yes | yes | no | NA | yes | NA | No | NA | NA |
| Was an Incremental Analysis of Costs | yes | no | yes | yes | yes | yes | No | NA | NA |
| Was Allowance Made for Uncertainty | yes | NA | yes | yes | yes | yes | NA | NA | NA |
| Did the Presentation and Discussion | no | No | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | no |
| Score | 8 from 10 | 5 from 10 | 9 from 10 | 9 from10 | 9 from 10 | 8 from 10 | 6 from 10 | 4 from 10 | 5 from 10 |
Figure 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA) flow diagram for the inclusion of studies.
Figure 2Forest plots of Decayed Missing Filled Teeth (DMFT)/S by the participating children.
Figure 3Forest plot of incremental cost-effectiveness per DMFT/S.
Figure 4Forest plot of DMFT/S by children age group: 1 as (Age > 6) and 2 as (Age ≤ 6).
Figure 5Forest plot of the incremental cost-effectiveness of the intervention and the control groups by the age groups: 1 as (Age > 6) and 2 as (Age ≤ 6).
Figure 6Forest plot for the difference in the DMFT of the intervention group compared to the control group regarding the study years.
Figure A1STATA do-files for analysis of Figure 2. “metan DMFTintervention NIntervention, DMFTcontrol Ncontrol, label (namevar = Author, yearvar = year) random or”.
Figure A2STATA do-file for analysis of Figure 3. “metan DMFTintervention Costintervetion DMFTcontrol Costcontrol, label (namevar = Author, yearvar = year) random or”.
Figure A3STATA do-file for analysis of Figure 4. “metan DMFTintervention NIntervention DMFTcontrol Ncontrol, label (namevar = Author, yearvar = year) by (age) random or”.
Figure A4STATA do-file for analysis Figure 5. “metan DMFTintervention Costintervetion DMFTcontrol Costcontrol, label (namevar = Author, yearvar = year) by (age) random or”.
Figure A5STATA do-files for analysis of Figure 6. “metan DMFTintervention Costintervetion, DMFTcontrol Costcontrol, label (namevar = Author, yearvar = year) by (One less than 2015 two 2015 onwards) random or”.
Figure A6STATA do-files for analysis of Figure 7. “metan DMFTintervention Costintervetion, DMFTcontrol Costcontrol label (namevar = Author, yearvar = year) by (Country) random or”.
Figure 7Forest plot for the difference in the DMFT/S of the intervention group compared to the control group by study countries.
Figure 8Eggers regression test to test hypothesis 1.
Figure 9Eggers regression test to test hypothesis 2.
Figure 10Funnel Plot represented from the eight pooled trial and model-based economic-evaluation studies of Oral Health Promotion Programs (OHPPs), with log-odds ratios displayed on the horizontal axis and the standard error of the log-odds ratios displayed on the vertical axis.