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Background/study aim:
Molar incisor hypomineralisation (MIH) is a common disorder of tooth development. Affected teeth have weak enamel and adult molars often require extensive treatment or even extraction. A preliminary study, carried out in Sheffield Dental Hospital, discovered that 12% of MIH children also had congenitally missing adult teeth, presenting further challenges to treatment-planning. This novel finding stimulated discussion between international MIH experts; whilst some clinicians had observed this association, others had not. Therefore the primary aim of this international study is to determine the association between MIH and missing teeth in different populations. This has important clinical and biological relevance in understanding the presentation and management of MIH.
Participants/research sites:
This study will include 584 children with MIH and a comparison group of 584 children without MIH. Young dental patients, aged 7-16 years, who attend for a check-up or treatment at one of the 15 participating countries will be invited to take part. The UK sites are Sheffield, Newcastle and University College London Dental Hospitals and all children will be seen by specialists/consultants in paediatric dentistry to confirm their diagnosis of MIH. The main inclusion criteria is that children have a dental xray as part of their routine care.
Data collection:
Following a routine dental check-up we will grade the severity of the participants' MIH (if present) and record any other dental anomalies (e.g. abnormal tooth number, position or shape). We will also check the dental xray for other anomalies that cannot be seen from the clinical exam. We will analyse the prevalence of MIH and association with other dental anomalies to see if there are difference according to sex or ethnicity and compare our findings with the non-MIH group. We anticipate the study will take 18 months.
Full description
The primary objective is to compare the overall prevalence of congenitally missing teeth/hypodontia (excluding wisdom teeth) in children (7-16 years old) with and without MIH.
Secondary research questions/objectives
The secondary research objectives are to:
What is the scientific justification for the research?
Molar incisor hypomineralisation (MIH) is one of the most common disorders of tooth development seen in paediatric dentistry practice around the world. A recent meta-analysis of 99 studies, in 43 different countries, estimated the global prevalence of MIH to be 13.1% with significant variations seen between super-regions, regions and countries.
A wide variety of other dental anomalies are also seen in childhood, broadly encompassing deviations in tooth number, morphology, structure, position and eruption. Prevalence data for all these different developmental disorders vary widely, depending on the anomaly in question, diagnostic approach and the target population . It is also important to note that the presence of one anomaly should always alert clinicians to the possibility of others, as numerous studies have demonstrated significant inter-relationships between certain anomaly types. Recently, a UK study explored, for the first time, the prevalence of dental anomalies in children diagnosed with MIH. Clinical and radiographic examination of 101 children aged 6-15 years found that, in total, 29% of patients had another dental anomaly in addition to MIH (Walshaw et al., 2020).
There are established guidelines for the management of children with MIH. In some situations, the extraction of one or more first permanent molars is the preferred option, providing all other permanent teeth (and preferably third permanent molars/wisdom teeth) are present. Thus, the congenital absence of a second premolar in the same quadrant would have considerable impact on this decision and potentially compromises long-term outcomes. A controlled study, exploring any association between the presence of MIH and hypodontia, in addition to other dental anomalies, is clearly warranted to better inform patient management. The need for earlier radiographic examination and definitive treatment for hypomineralised first permanent molars would be paramount if such an association is confirmed by the proposed multi-centre international study.
Design and methodology.
This will be a cross-sectional study involving children with MIH and a comparison group of non MIH-affected children.
Burden to research participants Research participants (MIH and comparison group) will not be required to attend any additional visits other than their scheduled check-up or treatment visit. However, their dental check up will take slightly longer than normal (around an extra 5 minutes) as we will be recording in more detail than usual the condition of their enamel (using a validated scoring system of MIH). They will have a dental xray taken as part of their 'routine care' so will not be exposed to unnecessary ionising radiation. They will also be invited to have clinical photographs of their teeth, which may not have been part of their 'routine care'. They will also be verbally asked two (validated) questions about how they rate their own oral health, which is not part of routine care.
Study population
Participants will be recruited from patients attending for treatment, a recall or new patient assessment, in the host centres. Written informed consent will be obtained for study participation from parents/guardians and children. The 'experimental ' group will be children aged 7-16 years referred to specialist paediatric dentistry services for the management of MIH in the following countries:
A sample size of 1168 children (584 per group) was calculated. In order to achieve this sample size, each centre will aim to recruit 84 participants (42 patients per MIH group and 42 patients per control group).
Examiner training and calibration
Examiner training and calibration will be conducted on-line, using Microsoft Teams, using a set of ten clinical images and radiographs to ensure that there is acceptable intra-and inter-examiner agreement for key parameters under investigation as follows:
Examination and data collection An electronic data collection 'form' will be developed and piloted prior to commencement of the main study. The following non-identifiable patient and clinical variables will be recorded prior to transfer to a shared electronic dataset using secure processes.
Demographics
Assessment of taurodontism (abnormal root canal shape) For patients with mature apical development of their first permanent mandibular molars (10 years and over) an objective assessment of taurodontism will be carried out using digital measurements from panoral (dental) radiographs. This will be done according to established protocols; in brief, a diagnosis of taurodontism will be made if the crown/root ratio of the tooth is >1.1 (indicating that the crown pulp shape is abnormally elongated compared to the root length).
Data entry and statistical analysis.
Each unit will be responsible for anonymised electronic data entry for their participants and will send the complete data set securely to the principal investigators for data analysis.
Simple descriptive analysis will be used to present the demographic, clinical and radiographic findings for the MIH and control groups. In addition, statistical tests will be applied to determine:
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Eligibility criteria Participants are children aged 7-16 years-old, with and without MIH, who meet the inclusion criteria, and attend for assessment or treatment in the participating clinics. To avoid bias, the comparison group will not be solely drawn from a pool of orthodontic patients or those primarily referred with a known diagnosis of dental anomalies
Generic inclusion criteria - all participants (both MIH and comparison groups)
MIH-group specific inclusion criteria.
MIH-group specific exclusion criteria
1,279 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Helen D Rodd, BDS, PhD; Alessia Dunn
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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