| Literature DB >> 35049724 |
Inês Francisco1, Anabela Baptista Paula1,2,3,4,5, Madalena Ribeiro1, Filipa Marques1, Raquel Travassos1, Catarina Nunes1, Flávia Pereira1, Carlos Miguel Marto2,3,4,5,6, Eunice Carrilho2,3,4,5, Francisco Vale1.
Abstract
Three-dimensional (3D) resin medical-dental devices have been increasingly used in recent years after the emergence of digital technologies. In Orthodontics, therapies with aligners have gained popularity, mainly due to the aggressive promotion policies developed by the industry. However, their systemic effects are largely unknown, with few studies evaluating the systemic toxicity of these materials. The release of bisphenol A and other residual monomers have cytotoxic, genotoxic, and estrogenic effects. This systematic review aims to analyze the release of toxic substances from 3D resins used in Orthodontics and their toxic systemic effects systematically. The PICO question asked was, "Does the use of 3D resins in orthodontic devices induce cytotoxic effects or changes in estrogen levels?". The search was carried out in several databases and according to PRISMA guidelines. In vitro, in vivo, and clinical studies were included. The in vitro studies' risk of bias was assessed using the guidelines for the reporting of pre-clinical studies on dental materials by Faggion Jr. For the in vivo studies, the SYRCLE risk of bias tool was used, and for the clinical studies, the Cochrane tool. A total of 400 articles retrieved from the databases were initially scrutinized. Fourteen articles were included for qualitative analysis. The risk of bias was considered medium to high. Cytotoxic effects or estrogen levels cannot be confirmed based on the limited preliminary evidence given by in vitro studies. Evidence of the release of bisphenol A and other monomers from 3D resin devices, either in vitro or clinical studies, remains ambiguous. The few robust results in the current literature demonstrate the absolute need for further studies, especially given the possible implications for the young patient's fertility, which constitutes one of the largest groups of patients using these orthodontic devices.Entities:
Keywords: 3D resin; aligner; cytotoxicity; estrogenicity; invisalign; monomer; retainer
Year: 2022 PMID: 35049724 PMCID: PMC8773237 DOI: 10.3390/bioengineering9010015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioengineering (Basel) ISSN: 2306-5354
Figure 1Flow Diagram of the eligibility of publication scrutiny according to PRISMA guidelines.
Summary of parameters and results from in vitro included studies.
| Authors, Year | Study Design | Fabrication Technique | Resin Composition | Cell Line | Sample Size (n) | Test Group | Time | Assay Type | Results | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eliades T. et al, 2009 [ | Extract Technique | Thermoformed | Invisalign appliances | Cytotoxicity | 3 sets of aligners; n = 6 (96 aligner eluents per group). | Test group: invisalign at 5%, 10%, 20%; | 2 months | Cytotoxicity (by modification of the MTT assay); | Cytotoxicity (optical density of human gingival fibroblasts); | No cytotoxicity or estrogenic activity of Invisalign appliances was documented in this in vitro assay. |
| Kurzmann C. et al., 2017 [ | Direct and indirect contact | Resins for Stereolithographic 3D-Printed | Clear resin (FLGPCL02), | L929 cell line, | n = 96-well culture plates | Test group: | 24 h | Macroscopic and scanning electron microscopy. | When exposed to the materials, the cellular activity of L929 cells and gingival fibroblasts was observed. | The impact of Clear and Dental SG resins depends on the processing stage of the material. |
| Rogers H. et al., 2021 [ | Ex vivo + in vitro (direct and indirect) | 3D-printed using Form 2 SLA printers | Dental SG (DSG-FLDGOR01, Lot Nos. XN232N05, XK244N01, XK242N01, XK25N01, XH084N05) and Dental LT Clear (DLT-FLDLCL01, Lot Nos. XK484N02, XH043N02, XK29N02). | Mouse oocytes | n = 540 | Test group: DSG and DLT wells; Control group: polystyrene control. | 168 h | Mass spectroscopy | Exposure to DSG and DLT was proved to induce rapid mammalian oocyte degeneration in vitro. | The use of two 3DP resins revealed severe reproductive toxicity. |
| Kessler A. et al., 2020 [ | Extract technique | 3D-printed using Rapidshape D20 II (RS), Solflex 350 (SF), Form2 (Form). | 3Delta Guide (UDMA, TMPTA, TPO); Freeprint Splint (Acrylated resin, Aliphatic urethane acrylate, TPGDA, THFMA, TPO); Fotodent Guide (BIS-EMA, Acrylresin, HEMA, HPMA, Monoester with 1,2-Propandiol, TPO); Nextdent SG (Methacrylic oligomers, Phosphine oxide); V-printed SG (BIS-EMA, UDMA, TPO). | Chemical analysis: | n = 4 | Not reported | 3 days | Finnigan Trace GC ultra gas chromatograph connected to a DSQ mass spectrometer. | The elution in methanol (total of twelve) and water (total of four) detected the release of substances. | The material and the printing device have a significant influence on the release of monomers from 3D-printed surgical guides. |
| Kotyk M. et al., 2014 [ | Extract tecnhique | Thermoformed | Biocryl Essix (prethermoformed and thermoformed); Biocryl Retainer (prethermoformed and thermoformed); Dentsply Raintree Essix (prethermoformed), Dentsply Essix (thermoformed), Invisalign aligner (unused and used). | Chemical analysis: | n = 8 retainer materials, cut into pieces of an unspecified number. | Not reported | 2 weeks | Gas chromatography/mass spectroscopy (GC-MS). | In the first 3 days of artificial saliva immersion, BPA leaching was observed. | - BPA was found to leach from thermoformed Biocryl acrylic resin retainer material; |
| Naqbi A. et al., 2018 [ | Indirect contact (extract tecnhique) | Thermoformed | Vivera retainers (from the manufacturer and after retrieved from patients). | Estrogen-sensitive MCF-7 Estrogen-insensitive MDA-MB-231. | n = 12 (6 for each of the two groups; 48 aligner eluents per group). | Test group: retainers sterilized with gamma-irradiation, retainers sterilized with autoclaving; | 14 days | Cytotoxicity and Estrogenicity. | No significant proliferation of MCF-7, and MDA-MB-231 cells were induced by the three samples. | - Vivera retainers did not seem to exhibit cytotoxicity or estrogenic activity; |
| Schuster S. et al., 2004 [ | Mechanical test | Thermoformed | Invisalign appliances | Mechanical analysis | n = 10 samples of aligners before intraoral placement and after retrieval; n = 12 samples of same aligners after placement intraorally for 22hours for 2 weeks. | Not reported | 2 weeks | Reflection microscopy, FTIR, scanning electron microscopy, Vickers hardness, Gas chromatography-mass spectroscopy (GC-MS). | Retrieved Invisalign appliance shows a morphological variation (Reflection microscopy, FTIR, scanning electron microscopy, Vickers hardness). | No definitive consensus on the reactivity and biological properties can be established. |
| Xu Y. et al., 2021 [ | Mechanical test | Stereolithographically (SLA) printed | Dental LT Clear resin (UDMA, HEMA, EGDMA, HPA) | L929 mouse fibroblasts | n = 12 | Not reported | Mechanical test—12 h | Flexural strength test | No alterations were detected on the samples for less than 1 h. When post-rising prolonged to 12 h could be observed surface fissures. | The removal of cytotoxic methacrylate monomers by post rinsing could be achieved in 5 min. |
| Wedekind L. et al., 2021 [ | Indirect contact | Additive manufacturing (3D-printing: SHERAprint-ortho plus); Subtractive manufacturing (SHERAeco-disc PM20); Conventional manufacturing (SHERAORTHOMER). | Polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA) (THFMA, BDDMA, TPGDA). | Human gingival fibroblasts | Not reported | Each sample eluted with water and methanol | 24 h and 72 h | GC/MS analysis XTT based cell viability assay. | With the solvent methanol, the released components exceeded the cytotoxic concentrations; | With the solvent methanol, released components from the investigated splint materials exceeded cytotoxic concentrations in HGFs calculated for a worst-case scenario in splint size. |
| Alifui-Segbaya F. et al., 2018 [ | Indirect contact (extract tecnhique) | EnvisionTec’s digital processing (DLP) and Formlab’s reverse stereolithography (SL) systems | E-Denture (ED), E-Guard (EG), Dental SG (DSG) methacrylates. | Zebrafish embryo model | n = 10 | - E-Denture (ED); | 96 h and 120 h | FTIR spectroscopy | Biocompatibility was influenced by physicochemical characteristics of materials. | - Despite the twofold increase in DC (%) for nTx EG, it was unsafe in zebrafish bioassays; hence there is a limited correlation between conversion rate and biological performance. |
| Kopperud H. et al., 2011 [ | Extract tecnhique | Heat-cure (Orthocryl), Light-cured (Triad VLC), Thermoplastic (Biocryl C, Essix A+, Essix Embrace) resins. | Methyl methacrylate (MMA), acetonitrile, ammonium acetate, 2,4-dinitro-phenylhydrazine (DNPH), distilled water, 2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate (2-HEMA), methanol and UDMA. | Chemical analysis: | n = 5 | Not reported | 10 days | Gas chromatography/mass spectroscopy (GC-MS) and liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry. | Leaching methacrylate monomers from prefabricated thermoplastic plates are lower than those from powder-and-liquid-based material and from paste material. | Orthodontic prefabricated thermoplastic plates should be preferred. |
| Nakano H. et al., 2019 [ | Indirect contact | 3D-printed | Acrylic-epoxy hybrid light-curing resins | Not reported | n = 8 | Okamoto Chemicals (3D-1M: 1); NextDent (Ortho Clear); ISO20795-2 | 24 h and 72 h | Cellular toxicity LDH-test | Have successfully developed a 3D biocompatible resin, without cellular toxicity but with not yet ideal mechanical properties. | Achieved a biocompatible 3D-printed resin that releases no toxic materials to humans or the environment. |
Summary of parameters and results from in vivo included studies.
| Authors, Year | Study Design | Sample Size (n) | Test Groups | Fabrication Technique | Resin Composition | Outcome Time | Study Measure Outcome | Results | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chen S. et al., 2016 [ | In vivo | Mini-screw implant + thermoplastic sample Wistar (n = 80). | Test group of aligner (n = 30); | Thermoformed | - Invisalign Smart Track aligners; | T1:28 days; | 0.5 mL blood samples (rat orital vein); | - Al, Ti, V, Cr, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn were detected in polymeric retainers; | - The metal elements in polymeric materials evaluated in blood did not exceed toxic values; |
Summary of parameters and results from clinical included studies.
| Authors, Year | Study Design | Sample Size (n, Sex) | Control Group | Intervention Group (Time of Use) | Fabrication Technique | Resin Composition | Outcome Time (Hours) | Study Measure Outcome | Results | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Raghavan A. et al., 2017 [ | RCT | n = 45: | Not reported | T0: before placement; | G1: Biostar vacuum thermoforming system (VFR); | G1: Essix ACE Plastic Vaccum-formed retainers (VFRs); | 180 saliva samples | BPA levels in the saliva | BPA levels: | - Increases BPA levels in saliva in all groups after placement of the retainers; |
Figure 2Risk of bias of the in vitro studies.
Figure 3Risk of bias of the in vivo study.
Figure 4Risk of bias of the RCT study.