Tooth loss during supportive periodontal care: A prospective study
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Hasan, Fatemah; Magán Fernández, Antonio; Akcali, Aliye; Sun, Chuanming; Donos, Nikos; Nibali, LuigiEditorial
John Wiley & Sons
Materia
Maintenance Periodontitis Prognosis
Fecha
2204-02-26Referencia bibliográfica
Hasan, F., Magan-Fernandez, A., Akcalı, A., Sun, C., Donos, N., & Nibali, L. (2024). Tooth loss during supportive periodontal care: A prospective study. Journal of Clinical Periodontology, 51(5), 583–595. https://doi.org/10.1111/jcpe.13943
Patrocinador
Grant from the Oral Dental Research Trust (ODRT)Resumen
Aim: To assess periodontal stability and the association between tooth- and patientrelated
factors and tooth loss during supportive periodontal care (SPC).
Materials and Methods: A prospective observational study was carried out on previously
treated periodontitis patients followed up for 5 years in SPC. The risk profile
(low, moderate, high) of each patient based on periodontal risk assessment (PRA)
scoring at baseline was evaluated, and tooth loss rates were analysed.
Results: Two hundred patients were included in the study, and 143 had 5-year follow-up
data available for analysis. The overall annual tooth loss per patient was 0.07 ± 0.14
teeth/patient/year. Older age, smoking, staging and grading were associated with
increased tooth loss rates. Most patients whose teeth were extracted belonged to the
PRA high-risk group. Both PRA and a tooth prognosis system used at baseline showed
high negative predictive value but low positive predictive value for tooth loss during SPC.
Conclusions: Overall, the tooth loss rate of periodontitis patients in this prospective
cohort study under SPC in private practice was low. Both tooth-based and patientbased
prognostic systems can identify high-risk cases, but their positive predictive
value should be improved.