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A Comparison of the Outcomes of Two Existing Routine Clinical Therapies for Dental Prophylaxis

N

National University Health System, Singapore

Status

Completed

Conditions

Gingivitis

Treatments

Procedure: Plaque disclosed with rubber cup
Procedure: Plaque disclosed with air flow
Procedure: Non plaque disclosed rubber cup
Procedure: Non plaque disclosed air flow

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03471325
2016/00916

Details and patient eligibility

About

Background: In most practices, conventional in-office prophylaxis starts immediately with scaling and polishing. Therefore, this project was designed to challenge tradition by comparing plaque removal efficacy of rubber cup and air polishing in two scenarios, one where plaque was disclosed prior to treatment and the other where plaque was not disclosed.

Methods: In this randomized, single blind, split-mouth design clinical trial, healthy, non-smoking participants with poor oral hygiene were recruited. Quadrants in each participant were randomly assigned to 4 treatment groups, which were plaque disclosure with rubber cup polishing, no plaque disclosure with rubber cup polishing, plaque disclosure with air polishing, and no plaque disclosure with air polishing. Examiners were calibrated and masked to the treatment rendered in each quadrant. Post treatment satisfaction questionnaires for both participants and operators were completed. Plaque scores for each quadrant and treatment time were the recorded outcome measures.

Full description

According to the literature search, there was no preceding study, which compared the efficacy of conventional routine of rubber cup or air powder polishing with or without prior plaque disclosure. Therefore, this study was designed to test the hypotheses that (1) disclosing plaque prior to dental polishing was more effective than dental polishing alone, (2) air polishing was more efficient than rubber cup polishing, and (3) operators and patients prefer air polishing to rubber cup polishing.

In order to evaluate the hypotheses raised, a single blind, randomised controlled clinical trial with a split mouth design was conducted. The control groups had conventional dental prophylaxis regime of mechanical plaque removal with either fine air powder polishing or rubber cup polishing using fine grit prophylaxis paste. The test groups had plaque disclosure prior to mechanical plaque removal as described for the control groups. In total, there were 4 study groups: (1) rubber cup polishing without prior plaque disclosure (RC-NPD) (negative control), (2) rubber cup polishing with prior plaque disclosure (RC-PD) (positive control), (3) air polishing without prior plaque disclosure (AF-NPD) (negative test), and (4) air polishing with prior plaque disclosure (AF-PD) (positive test).

The quadrant that was assigned to receive RC-NPD was treated first followed by the quadrant assigned to receive AF-NPD. Plaque was disclosed in all 4 quadrants and the assigned calibrated examiner proceeded to chart the FMPS. Next, the quadrant assigned to receive RC-PD was treated, followed by the quadrant assigned to receive AF-PD; subsequently FMPS was charted. Any aberrant findings in occlusion, tooth alignment, extra/missing teeth were also noted. A digital stopwatch was used to time the treatment duration for each quadrant. Both participant and clinician completed a post prophylaxis satisfaction questionnaire. The treatment workflow used in this study was illustrated in figure 1. The primary outcome measure was the post treatment FMPS and the secondary outcomes measures were the treatment duration.

Descriptive statistics (mean and standard deviations) was used to summarize the plaque score and treatment duration for each study group. Two-way repeated measure ANOVA test was employed to examine the study hypotheses that air polishing was more effective in removing plaque compared to rubber cup polishing and disclosing plaque prior to prophylaxis increased the thoroughness of the prophylaxis. Two-way repeated measure ANOVA test was also performed to study the treatment duration between the 2 polishing methods and treatment regimens of with or without plaque disclosure prior to prophylaxis. In a secondary analysis, interactions were tested to study if there were differences among the 4 operators. Paired T-test and Pearson's Chi-Square tests were used to study the participant's and operator's preference for each treatment modality based on various yardsticks and overall, respectively. The level of significance was set at p-value<0.05. All statistical analyses were carried out using a statistical package.

Enrollment

89 patients

Sex

All

Ages

21 to 35 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

    1. Age 21 to 35 years old
    1. Healthy
    1. Non-smoker
    1. With gingivitis and poor oral hygiene (plaque score of at least 50%)
    1. English literate

Exclusion criteria

    1. Smoker
    1. Pregnant or lactating females
    1. Unable to speak/read/write/communicate in English
    1. With dentures or bridges or braces

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

89 participants in 4 patient groups, including a placebo group

Plaque Disclosed with Air Flow (PDAF)
Experimental group
Description:
Plaque will be disclosed prior to polishing with the air flow system.
Treatment:
Procedure: Plaque disclosed with air flow
Plaque Disclosed with Rubber Cup (PD-RC)
Experimental group
Description:
Plaque will be disclosed prior to polishing with the rubber cup and fine grit prophylaxis paste.
Treatment:
Procedure: Plaque disclosed with rubber cup
Non Plaque Disclosed Air Flow (NPD-AF)
Experimental group
Description:
Air polishing system will be used to remove the plaque
Treatment:
Procedure: Non plaque disclosed air flow
Non Plaque Disclosed Rubber Cup (NPD-RC)
Placebo Comparator group
Description:
Rubber Cup polishing to remove plaque.
Treatment:
Procedure: Non plaque disclosed rubber cup

Trial contacts and locations

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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