Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

This study aimed to test whether sealing microcavitated ICDAS 3 carious lesions in permanent molars may be arrested by sealing using two different types of materials; a glass ionomer and a resin sealant. A Randomized controlled clinical trial was designed. Children between 6 and 12 years old were recruited and a total of 150 ICDAS 3 lesions in first permanent molars were allocated to one of the two arms of the study. Clinical and radiographic lesion progression were the main outcome. Integrity of the material and retention were secondary outcomes. A follow up period of 24 months with check-ups at 6 and 12 months was considered.


Clinical Trial Description

Background and problem statement. Traditionally, caries treatment has been based on restorative procedures performed by dentist using dental biomaterials. Besides its high cost, this canonical approach for caries therapy has very limited coverage and only a small proportion of the population can satisfy the high demand. The latter is especially critical in developing countries. Available evidence has shown that some caries lesions, either cavitated or non-cavitated, may be treated by the placement of sealants. This minimally invasive treatment is more cost-effective than the restorative approach and it allows better coverage. Sealants placed on the active lesions hamper lesion progression, most likely by inhibiting nutrient uptake of the invading associated microbiota. The most commonly used material in clinical practice is resin sealant. Despite its advantages and simplicity of use, this material is highly sensitive to contamination by saliva or other ubiquitous oral fluids. Furthermore, adhesion to enamel is compromised when this tissue is immature. This pitfall of the technique is particularly crucial when it comes to treating lesions in erupting molars in children. Hence, glass ionomer cement (GI) sealants emerge as a potential alternative to resin sealants. GI sealants are more suitable to be used under non-ideal clinical conditions, such as in the presence of humidity or on lesions of immature erupting molars. Although there exists vast evidence on the use of sealants as preventive agents, studies dealing with this biomaterial as a therapeutic agent for caries lesions are more limited and scarce. In regard to the material, only few clinical studies with unclear conclusions are available. This proposal, therefore, will seek to compare progression of caries lesions treated with either resin or GI sealants, in occlusal cavitated lesions (Code 3, ICDAS) of permanent molars of 6 to 12 year-old children.

Methodology. A randomized controlled clinical trial (RCT) is proposed. Once approved by the Bioethics Committee and after obtaining a signed informed consent from their parents, volunteer children will be invited to participate. Two hundred caries lesions (Code 3, ICDAS) will be randomized to one of the two arms of the study, resin or GI sealants. The materials chosen to conduct the study would be Concise and Ketac Molar, respectively, both from 3M, St. Paul, MN. Sample size was estimated using a 95% significance level. Based on the caries prevalence of the population and studies performed by the investigators, the number of volunteers was estimated to be about one hundred volunteers to gather the required two hundred lesions. Three evaluations will be conducted every six months until completion of eighteen month of follow-up. All the exams and controls will be performed at the Dental Clinics of the University of Talca by one trained and calibrated examiner. Sealants will be placed following manufacturer's instructions. Participants will be randomly allocated to either study arm, regardless of the clinical indication, so selection bias will be avoided. Material retention and lesion progression will be the primary end-point at each control. Likewise, caries incidence in untreated teeth will be a secondary outcome of the study. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02849925
Study type Interventional
Source University of Talca
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date March 2015
Completion date October 2017

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT04127929 - Investigation of Glass Carbomer Performance N/A
Completed NCT04769882 - Er:YAG Laser Effects on Microbial Population in Conservative Dentistry N/A
Completed NCT04971317 - The Influence of Simple, Low-Cost Chemistry Intervention Videos: A Randomized Trial of Children's Preferences for Sugar-Sweetened Beverages N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT04475679 - Clinical Evaluation of Adhese Universal DC in the Indirect Restorative Therapy N/A
Completed NCT05438381 - Comparison of Clinical and Radiographic Outcomes of SMART Technique vs ART in Primary Molars N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT03037814 - Clinical Performance of Restorative Materials in Primary Teeth N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT05202665 - Resin Infiltration and Fluoride Varnish Lesion Arresting Efficacy on Non-cavitated Proximal Lesion N/A
Terminated NCT01147835 - Herbal Lollipops on Oral Bacterial Levels and DMFT/Dmft Scores of Children With Asthma Using Inhalers N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT04033263 - Maintaining Oral Health With Bio-products N/A
Enrolling by invitation NCT04438252 - Evaluation of Reliability of CarieScan PRO Compared With Digital Radiograph and ICDAS-II in Detection of Carious Lesions N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT03609034 - Knowledge, Attitude and Practice of a Group of Egyptian Dental Interns Toward Caries Risk Assessment
Completed NCT02912000 - TEACH: Technology Evaluation to Address Child Health N/A
Completed NCT02473107 - Impact of Detecting Initial and Active Caries Lesions in Primary Teeth N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT02537184 - Impact of Two Recall Intervals on Dental Caries Incidence and Other Outcomes of Preschool Children N/A
Completed NCT01950546 - Nanosilver Fluoride to Prevent Dental Biofilms Growth Phase 1
Recruiting NCT02734420 - Effect of Photodynamic Therapy With Low-level Laser on Infected Dentin in Primary Teeth: A Controlled Clinical Trial Phase 1
Completed NCT02020681 - Effect of Curodont Repair or Placebo on the Remineralisation in Patients With Class 5 Carious Lesions N/A
Completed NCT02426619 - Arresting Active Dental Caries in Preschool Children by Topical Fluorides Phase 2/Phase 3
Completed NCT02234609 - Effectiveness of Modified Class IV Atraumatic Restorative Treatment N/A
Completed NCT01623362 - Evaluation of a Low Fluoride Dentifrice for Caries Control Phase 3