The dynamic behavior of the early dental caries lesion in caries-active adults and implications
Objective To describe the full range of behavior of the visible, noncavitated, early caries lesion in caries‐active adults with substantial fluoride exposure, and to consider implications. Methods The data were from the Xylitol for Adult Caries Trial (X‐ACT) collected annually for 33 months using co...
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Published in | Community dentistry and oral epidemiology Vol. 43; no. 3; pp. 208 - 216 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Denmark
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
01.06.2015
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
ISSN | 0301-5661 1600-0528 1600-0528 |
DOI | 10.1111/cdoe.12143 |
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Summary: | Objective
To describe the full range of behavior of the visible, noncavitated, early caries lesion in caries‐active adults with substantial fluoride exposure, and to consider implications.
Methods
The data were from the Xylitol for Adult Caries Trial (X‐ACT) collected annually for 33 months using condensed ICDAS caries threshold criteria. Individual tooth surfaces having a noncavitated caries lesion were included, and the patterns of transition to each subsequent annual clinical examination to sound, noncavitated or cavitated, filled or crowned were determined. The resulting sets of patterns for an individual tooth surface, looking forward from its first appearance as a noncavitated lesion, were combined into one of four behavior profiles classified as reversing, stable, oscillating, or continuously progressing, or were excluded if not part of the caries continuum. The distributions of profile types were assessed using the Rao–Scott chi‐square test, which adjusts for clustering of tooth surfaces within teeth.
Results
Inter‐ and intra‐examiner kappa scores demonstrated acceptable calibration at baseline and annually. 8084 tooth surfaces from 543 subjects were included. The distribution of profile types differed significantly between coronal and root surfaces. Overall, two‐thirds of all coronal noncavitated lesions were first seen at baseline, half reversed, over a fifth were stable, 15% oscillated, and only 8.3% progressed to cavitation, filled, or crowned in 33 months or less (6.3% consistently Progressed plus 2.0% inconsistently, a subset of oscillating, which oscillated before progressing to cavitation). Approximal, smooth, and occlusal coronal surfaces each were significantly different in their individual distributions of profile types. Xylitol showed no significant and consistent effect on this distribution by tooth surface type. This was in keeping with the X‐ACT's lack of effect of xylitol at the noncavitated plus cavitated lesion thresholds combined.
Conclusions
This study demonstrated the full dynamic range of early caries lesion behavior. The great majority were not progressive, and few (8.3%) became cavitated over 33 months in caries‐active adults using fluorides. Important caries management implications favoring recorded longitudinal monitoring, prevention of active risks, and minimal restoration only after direct visual determination of cavitation are discussed. |
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Bibliography: | istex:3224DEFBF70FDF42217D375E4DD099995F7C01C0 ArticleID:CDOE12143 ark:/67375/WNG-M5K43T14-B National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research - No. U01DE018038; No. U01DE018047; No. U01DE018048; No. U01DE018049; No. U01DE018050 ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 14 content type line 23 |
ISSN: | 0301-5661 1600-0528 1600-0528 |
DOI: | 10.1111/cdoe.12143 |