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Effectiveness of Atraumatic Restorative Treatment Using Glass Ionomer Cement of Different Costs

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Dental Caries
Interventions
Other: Low Cost
Other: High Cost
Registration Number
NCT02778503
Lead Sponsor
Faculty Sao Leopoldo Mandic Campinas
Brief Summary

Atraumatic Restorative Treatment (ART) is an alternative restorative technique for dental caries, applying the partial caries tissue removal philosophy using hand instruments, relative cotton rolls isolation, immediate restoration with Glass Ionomer Cements (GIC) and avoiding local anesthesia. The chosen material for this study will be the High Viscosity Glass Ionomer Cement (HVGIC) due to its unique physical-chemical properties as well as its applicability in challenging clinical situations where other materials would not be adequate. Although there are substantial evidences regarding GIC properties, information about GIC (with different costs) longevity is still weak. Therefore, the objective of this study is to assess the effectiveness of ART restorations performed with low-cost HVGIC in cavitated dentine carious lesions in primary and permanent molars. This will be a multicenter randomized controlled double-blind (patient and operator) clinical trial performed with 680 primary and/or permanent molars in children between 4 and 9 years old presenting cavitated dentine carious lesions in occlusal and occlusal-proximal surfaces. The tooth will be considered as the unit sample, which will be randomly allocated to the groups through a generated random list numbers and distributed in dark sealed envelopes opened only by dental assistants. Teeth in the test group will be submitted to restorative treatment with HVGIC Vitro Molar and those in the control group with HVGIC Fuji IX. The restoration effectiveness will be assessed by means of both clinical and bitewing x-rays control after 6 and 12 months.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
574
Inclusion Criteria
  • Children with at least one primary and/or permanent molar with dentine carious lesion in the occlusal and/or occlusal-proximal surface.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Special need patients, subjects under orthodontic treatment and/or systemically compromised.
  • Teeth with restorations, sealants, developmental defects, deep carious lesions with pulpal exposure risk, fistula and/or abscess, and those with history of spontaneous pain.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Low CostLow CostRestoration using a low-cost glass ionomer cement.
High CostHigh CostRestoration using a high-cost glass ionomer cement.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Restoration survival12 months

The restoration will be classified according to the scores described by Frencken et al. (1994) and Roeleveld et al. (2006).

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Impact on children's quality of lifeBaseline and 12 months

The oral health related quality of life will be measured using a validated questionnaire according to the children's age. The "Early Childhood Oral Health Impact Scale" (ECOHIS) (Tesch et al., 2008) will be applied with 4-5 years old children. The "Child Perceptions Questionnaire" (CPQ) will be used for 6-9 years old children (Martins et al., 2009). They will be applied immediately before the procedure and on 12 months follow-up.

Cost-effectivenessThrough study completion (12 months)

The costs of each treatment procedure will be calculated and compared with thresholds values for intervention cost-effectiveness by region, determined by World Health Organization (http://www.who.int/choice/costs/CER_levels/en/).

Children self-reported discomfortBaseline

The discomfort of each treatment will be evaluated using the facial scale of Wong-Baker (Wong, Baker, 1988). The patient will be asked to choose the face that is more similar to how he/she felt during the treatment. The answer should be given solely by the child, which means no parental or professional interferences.

Caries lesions progressionEvery 6 months up to 12 months

The treatments will be evaluated radiographically. This evaluation will be performed by two blinded examiners, which will evaluate the four patients' radiographies (baseline, after treatment, 6 months, 12 months) independently, two by two, without knowing the chronological order of them. The efficacy of the treatment will be related to the presence or absence of increasing radiolucent area. They will also classify each radiography using Ekstrand criteria (Ekstrand et al., 1997) and analyze them in a software (ImageJ 1.49, National Institute of Health, USA) in order to make the radiographic subtraction.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Faculty Sao Leopoldo Mandic

🇧🇷

Campinas, Sao Paulo, Brazil

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