Efficacy of rehabilitation of stage IV periodontitis patients with full‐arch fixed prostheses: Tooth‐supported versus Implant‐supported—A systematic review
Autor: | Jan Derks, Cristiano Tomasi, Jean-Pierre Albouy, Dennis Schaller, Renata Camino Navarro |
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Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
Dental Implants
Periodontitis Rehabilitation business.industry medicine.medical_treatment MEDLINE Dentistry medicine.disease Peri-Implantitis law.invention Randomized controlled trial law medicine Tooth loss Humans Periodontics Observational study Dental Prosthesis Implant-Supported Dental Restoration Failure Implant medicine.symptom business Completely randomized design Follow-Up Studies |
Zdroj: | Journal of Clinical Periodontology. 49:248-271 |
ISSN: | 1600-051X 0303-6979 |
DOI: | 10.1111/jcpe.13511 |
Popis: | Objectives To evaluate the efficacy of implant-supported in comparison to tooth-supported full-arch prostheses in patients with stage IV periodontitis. Materials and methods Systematic electronic search (CENTRAL/MEDLINE/SCOPUS) up to March 2020 was conducted to identify randomized controlled trials and cohort-like studies comparing/evaluating fixed full-arch rehabilitation on teeth or implants in patients with stage IV periodontitis. The primary outcome measure was loss of teeth/implants and restorations. Data extraction was performed to create evidence tables, and meta-analyses were carried out as appropriate. Results A total of 26 studies (31 publications) were identified but none addressed the scientific question in a controlled and randomized design. The risk of bias throughout the included studies was judged to be high, and meta-analyses demonstrated a high degree of heterogeneity. Mean-weighted observation periods in studies on tooth-supported restorations were significantly longer than in studies on implant-supported restorations. The predicted loss of teeth and tooth-supported full-arch restorations over 10 years was 1% and 5%, respectively. The 15-year estimates were 10% and 13%. Corresponding predictions for implants and implant-supported restorations for 10 years amounted to 4% and 6%, respectively. Technical complications were the most commonly reported and affected 8% of tooth-supported restorations (during 7.2 years) and 42% of implant-supported structures (during 2.6 years). Peri-implantitis- or peri-implantitis-like symptoms were observed at an estimated 9% of implants (after 3.1 years). Conclusions Based on observational studies on full-arch rehabilitation of stage IV periodontitis patients, 10-year estimates of tooth loss were lower than the corresponding estimates for implants. Estimated loss of tooth- and implant-supported restorations at 10 years was similar. Technical complications were more prevalent at implant-supported when compared to tooth-supported restorations. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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