| Literature DB >> 35366952 |
Jan E Clarkson1,2, Craig R Ramsay3, Francesco Mannocci4, Fadi Jarad5, Sondos Albadri5, David Ricketts1, Carol Tait6, Avijit Banerjee7, Chris Deery8, Dwayne Boyers9, Zoe Marshman8, Beatriz Goulao3, Alice R Hamilton10, Katie Banister11, Rosanne Bell1, Lori Brown1, David I Conway12, Pina Donaldson1, Anne Duncan3, Katharine Dunn13, Patrick Fee1, Mark Forrest3, Anne-Marie Glenny14, Jill Gouick1, Ekta Gupta3, Elisabet Jacobsen9, Jennifer Kettle8, Graeme MacLennan3, Lorna Macpherson1, Tina McGuff1, Fiona Mitchell1, Marjon van der Pol9, Rebecca Moazzez15, Douglas Roberston12, Gabriella Wojewodka7, Linda Young2, Thomas Lamont1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Progression of dental caries can result in irreversible pulpal damage. Partial irreversible pulpitis is the initial stage of this damage, confined to the coronal pulp whilst the radicular pulp shows little or no sign of infection. Preserving the pulp with sustained vitality and developing minimally invasive biologically based therapies are key themes within contemporary clinical practice. However, root canal treatment involving complete removal of the pulp is often the only option (other than extraction) given to patients with irreversible pulpitis, with substantial NHS and patient incurred costs. The European Society of Endodontology's (ESE 2019) recent consensus statement recommends full pulpotomy, where the inflamed coronal pulp is removed with the goal of keeping the radicular pulp vital, as a more minimally invasive technique, potentially avoiding complex root canal treatment. Although this technique may be provided in secondary care, it has not been routinely implemented or evaluated in UK General Dental Practice.Entities:
Keywords: Feasibility; Full pulpotomy; General dental practice; Irreversible pulpitis; PPI; Primary care; Root canal treatment; Training; Vital pulp therapy
Year: 2022 PMID: 35366952 PMCID: PMC8976106 DOI: 10.1186/s40814-022-01029-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pilot Feasibility Stud ISSN: 2055-5784
Fig. 1Example of the sectioned Endo Reality 3D tooth showing FP
Feasibility criteria
Green—automatic progression. Amber—identify remediable factors and submit a recovery plan to the funder with new targets for the following 6 months. Red—stop the trial unless there is a strong case that unanticipated remediable factors have been identified and can be addressed
Scheduling of events
| General dental practice approvals and training | Clinical intervention training | Screening | Baseline (initial treatment visit) | 7-day follow-up | Qualitative interviews | Others | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of general dental practitioners recruited | ■ | ■ | |||||
| Success on training in full pulpotomy | ✓ | ||||||
| Assessment for eligibility | ¥ | o | |||||
| Informed consent | □ | ||||||
| Socio-demographic characteristics and eligibility for free treatment | o | ||||||
| Clinical fidelity of the full pulpotomy intervention | o | ● | |||||
| Clinical success—participants satisfied with care | ∞ | ⊕ | |||||
| Dental pain and need for dental pain relief | ∞ | ||||||
| Number of potentially eligible patients seen per month per GDP | ∇ |
“■” indicates general dental practitioner (GDP) signed off as greenlighted—completion of the Site Initiation Questionnaire, study approvals and training (Good Clinical Practice and clinical training)
“✓” indicates assessment by the study clinical team
“¥” indicates GDP completing the eligibility form
“o” indicates GDP completing case report form (CRF)
“□” indicates patient completing the consent form and countersigned by GDP
“●” indicates clinical post-operative radiographs
“∞” indicates phone call from the study team
“⊕” indicates qualitative interviews
“∇” indicates screening log
Fig. 2Gantt chart outlining the project timeline and milestones