Clinical Studies in Restorative Dentistry: New Directions and New Demands
Clinical Studies in Restorative Dentistry: New Directions and New Demands
Clinical Studies in Restorative Dentistry: New Directions and New Demands
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Article history: Clinical research of restorative materials is confounded by problems of study designs, length
Received 24 May 2017 of trials, type of information collected, and costs for trials, despite increasing numbers and
Accepted 24 August 2017 considerable development of trials during the past 50 years. This opinion paper aims to
Available online xxx discuss advantages and disadvantages of different study designs and outcomes for evaluat-
ing survival of dental restorations and to make recommendations for future study designs.
Keywords: Advantages and disadvantages of randomized trials, prospective and retrospective longitu-
Clinical trials dinal studies, practice-based, pragmatic and cohort studies are addressed and discussed.
Restoration The recommendations of the paper are that clinical trials should have rational control
Dental materials groups, include confounders such as patient risk factors in the data and analysis and should
Longevity use outcome parameters relevant for profession and patients.
Survival © 2017 The Academy of Dental Materials. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Retrospective
Prospective
Restorative dentistry
Contents
1. Introduction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .00
2. Clinical studies of different designs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 00
∗
Corresponding author.
E-mail address: Niek.opdam@radboudumc.nl (N.J.M. Opdam).
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dental.2017.08.187
0109-5641/© 2017 The Academy of Dental Materials. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Please cite this article in press as: Opdam NJM, et al. Clinical studies in restorative dentistry: New directions and new demands. Dent Mater
(2017), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dental.2017.08.187
DENTAL-3007; No. of Pages 12
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2 d e n t a l m a t e r i a l s x x x ( 2 0 1 7 ) xxx–xxx
Please cite this article in press as: Opdam NJM, et al. Clinical studies in restorative dentistry: New directions and new demands. Dent Mater
(2017), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dental.2017.08.187
DENTAL-3007; No. of Pages 12
(2017), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dental.2017.08.187
Please cite this article in press as: Opdam NJM, et al. Clinical studies in restorative dentistry: New directions and new demands. Dent Mater
Table 1 – Descriptive analysis on studies evaluating longevity of posterior composite restoration (n = 87) according study characteristic and statistical analysis
performed. (Studies published between 2005 and 2015).
Variables Retrospective studies References Prospective studies References
n (%) n (%)
Study characteristic
Funding of the study
By dental 0 (0.0) – 28 (37.3) [31,32,51–76]
manufac-
tures
By private 3 (25.0) [33,42,77] 23 (30.7) [17,19,27,28,78–96]
or public
institutions
Not 9 (75.0) [43,44,97–103] 24 (32.0) [30,104–126]
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reported
d e n t a l m a t e r i a l s x x x ( 2 0 1 7 ) xxx–xxx
Observation time
Up to 5 2 (16.7) [98,100] 57 (76.0) [30,32,33,42–44,51–62,64–73,75–80,82,84–87,92,94,95,97–108,110–114,117–126]
years
5 years or 10 (83.3) [33,42–44,77,97,109,101–103] 18 (24.0) [17,19,27,28,31,63,74,81,83,88–91,93,96,109,115,116]
more
Restorations included
Up to 100 2 (16.7) [97,100] 49 (65.3) [30–33,42–44,52–54,56–58,61,63,64,66–73,75–80,82–84,86–88,90,96–115,117,122–126]
More than 10 (83.3) [33,42–44,77,98,109,101–103] 26 (34.7) [17,19,27,28,51,55,59,60,62,65,74,81,85,89,91–95,116,118–121]
100
Participants included
Up to 100 5 (41.7) [42–44,97,109] 67 (89.3) [30–33,42–44,51–54,56–64,66–115,117,119–126]
More than 7 (58.3) [33,77,98,100–103] 8 (10.7) [17,19,27,28,55,65,116,118]
100
Risk Patients excluded
Yes 4 (33.3) [33,42,101,102] 45 (60.0) [19,30–32,51–53,56–64,66–69,72,75,76,82–85,87,104,105,107,108,110–113,117–126]
No 3 (25.0) [43,98,109] 20 (26.7) [27,54,55,62,65,70,71,74,81,86,88–96,116]
No 5 (41.7) [44,77,97,100,103] 10 (13.3) [17,28,73,78–80,106,109,114,115]
reported
3
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the art and science of dentistry and the consumers of oral resin techniques [16,17], repair versus replacement [18], inter-
healthcare—our patients [12]. vention versus no intervention. The number of prospective
clinical studies addressing such issues is limited, possibly
given the lack of funding and sponsoring opportunities —
2. Clinical studies of different designs manufacturers have limited interest in these types of stud-
ies, and only RCT’s comparing amalgam and composite have
In an attempt to get an overview of different types of stud- been supported by the American NIH in recent times [17,19].
ies, research questions, clinical trial methodologies, variables Another problem is the number of variables involved, espe-
and outcomes, a literature search was performed. An overview cially when fundamentally different techniques and materials
of longevity studies on direct posterior composite restora- are compared, e.g. amalgam vs. composite. However, these
tions published over the last 10 years (from January 1st, types of comparisons are important for dentists when it comes
2005 to September 30th, 2015) is set out in Table 1. The to effecting a change in behaviour, such as a shift to the
selection of studies was based on a search of the National use of composite rather than amalgam in the management
Library of Medicine international electronic database — MED- of primary lesions of caries requiring operative intervention.
LINE/PubMed (Table 3). The search was restricted to papers Behavioural change with many new technologies is highly rel-
written in English. Table 1 divides the 87 selected studies evant to the further development of the profession.
into “prospective” and “retrospective” and includes details on
study characteristics and the statistical analyses performed.
2 Materials testing
Detailed information on the assessment of each individual
study is presented in Appendix A (Supplementary material).
From Table 1, it can be seen that more than 60% of the Research questions testing a new material or technique
prospective clinical studies had less than 100 restorations as an alternative to an existing (gold standard) material or
included, observation times of <5 years, and 60% of the stud- technique that might offer major improvements in longevity,
ies did not provide information on important patients’ risk applicability, safety or efficiency [20,21]. Studies comparing a
factors such as caries experience and parafunctional habits. new material with an existing material (e.g. a new, suppos-
Moreover, only a limited number of the prospective stud- edly improved formulation vs. the current formulation) might
ies assessed the influence of risk factors on the longevity not have high clinical relevance if the existing standard mate-
of restorations by means of multivariable statistical anal- rial already performs sufficiently [22,23]. Moreover, one should
yses. More importantly, given relatively short observation note that any performance against the gold standard materials
times, 20% of the studies included no data on restoration fail- may well require high sample sizes to yield statistical sig-
ures. nificant differences, given the excellent performance of ‘gold
From the 10 year look-back review, prospective controlled standard’ materials. Considerations of the relevance of dif-
studies, despite having better quality of design (e.g. risk of ferences which are hard to demonstrate should be a focus in
bias definition — something we admittedly did not assess future trial reports [24].
here), it may be concluded that the considerable effort (and
cost) of running the typical prospective trial results in impor- 3 Assessing patient risk factors
tant limitations linked to observation time, low number of
retained patients and statistical underpowering. Furthermore,
Studies investigating the influence of risk factors on
there is evidence that an increasing number of RCTs are being
longevity that are related to the human factors in dentistry:
performed to investigate materials that “do not outperform
patients and dentists. While most clinical studies focus on
in vitro, lack fundamental properties, or do not fulfil the pre-
materials and their properties, it is increasingly recognised
requisites required for clinical trials” [14].
that other factors, including caries risk, bruxism, socio-
economic status and operator variables [25–28] play a major,
3. Relevant research questions and even dominant role in restoration longevity.
When a clinical study is being planned, one of the main 4 High risk testing
questions should be: will the design and expected outcome
contribute to better care in dentistry? Clinical relevance of
Studies aiming to test the performance of restorative work
studies will be improved if problems and questions general
in challenging clinical situations [29] may be considered to
practitioners face every day will be addressed by the research.
be ‘high risk testing’. Many clinical studies exclude high risk
In our opinion, the following questions could have such rele-
patients, notably high caries risk patients and patients with
vance:
bruxism from their study population [30,31]. Moreover, the size
of restorations in clinical trials is oftentimes limited, and cases
1 Technique comparisons involving deep subgingival margins or cusp replacement are
excluded. This is understandable as RCTs aim to remove con-
Studies comparing two fundamentally different restora- founding variables, but might also be linked to sponsors and
tive techniques for a specific situation, such as indirect funders of clinical research wishing to see positive outcomes
versus direct restoration [15], mechanistic, interventive amal- from expensive studies. Dentists, however, face such chal-
gam techniques versus minimum intervention composite lenges on a daily basis, and need meaningful research data
Please cite this article in press as: Opdam NJM, et al. Clinical studies in restorative dentistry: New directions and new demands. Dent Mater
(2017), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dental.2017.08.187
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to guide them in their adoption, or rejection of new materials Alternative to Ryge or FDI criteria, the functional presence
and techniques. of a restoration may be viewed as critical, indicating that a
restoration is still functioning in the mouth (success) or has
been replaced or repaired (failure). This method is used in
5 Long-term longevity studies
practice based studies, prospective as well as retrospective
[27–29,33] but lacks detailed quality assessment of a restora-
Studies planned with less than 2–3 years observation time tion. It is highly dependent on the treating dentist and the
have limited clinical relevance as most, modern day materials criteria he or she uses to decide whether a restoration needs
will be able to perform satisfactorily for that length of time to be replaced or not. Therefore, the reasons for failure or
in clinical service [21,32]. Moreover, one of the most impor- replacement, and the criteria used for such decision need to
tant reasons for restoration failure, secondary caries, tends to be recorded. When it comes to defining what is a success and
occur after more than 2–3 years in clinical service [28]. Future a failure, Anusavice [34] suggest that a restoration is “success-
studies should compare materials or treatments over a rele- ful” if no intervention is indicated, and a “failure”, when the
vant timeframe. entire restoration must be replaced or the tooth extracted.
A third category is restorations that are repaired or received
endodontic treatment with the restoration remaining in place;
4. Outcomes and outcome measures these are classified as “survived” [32]. For direct restorations,
previously all interventions were considered indicative of fail-
As described, most clinical trials on restorative materials use ure, including repairs where the original restoration is still (at
standardised criteria, applied by calibrated observers, which least in large part) in place. For standardisation reasons, and
yield minute differences between materials or treatments on a to be able to compare longevity of direct and indirect restora-
range of aspects (colour, margin, surface behaviour etc.) [20,26]. tions, it would be good to use the same definitions of success,
Moreover, they often deem specific situations as requiring survival and failure for all types of restorations:
replacement (the Ryge criteria, for example, include Charlie
and Delta ratings, indicating that restorations need immedi-
ate replacement or replacement in the near future). In clinical
dental practice however, the replacement of a restoration 1. Success: at evaluation, the restoration is still functioning
depends not only on the status of the restored tooth but also and no intervention (repair or replacement) is indicated. In
on the oral and general health of the individual patient, risk this regard, refurbishment, recontouring and polishing is
assessment outcomes, and, last but not least, informed con- not considered to be an intervention.
sent of the patient. Given that restorations nowadays are often 2. Survival: a restoration requires repair. This category would
monitored, refurbished or repaired, even those rated Charlie or also include teeth that require endodontic intervention, but
Delta might continue to function (i.e. remain in clinical service) with the restoration remaining in place, with the access
for many years. As well defined standardised criteria are the opening restored following the endodontic therapy.
key to compare the clinical status of restorations over time, 3. Failure: cases where a restoration must be replaced or the
the FDI criteria might be an alternative, and could even be tooth removed for reason related to the restorations, such
simplified by merging grade 1–3 to one grade — clinically sat- as tooth fracture, but unrelated to periodontal health or
isfactory. Similarly, not all FDI criteria need to be used in all trauma.
studies; in fact, single criteria can be selected for the specific 4. If a restoration is removed for reasons unrelated to material
goal of the study and the remaining criteria could be omitted performance; for example, an abutment tooth for a bridge
(e.g. aesthetics). or a tooth removed for periodontal reasons, the event may
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(2017), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dental.2017.08.187
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be noted but not recorded as a failure, resulting in censoring However, in clinical research in restorative dentistry, e.g. in
in the analysis. trials comparing crowns and fillings, blinding is impossible
and the likelihood of these types of bias is inevitable, albeit
Besides longevity, there is increasing acceptance that other that it may be reduced by using more operators and evalua-
outcomes, including, subjective judgment and material con- tors. The fact that patients are aware of the applied therapy
siderations by patients or practitioners are also relevant. As includes the risk for sampling bias, as many patients will not
occurs in other disciplines, core outcome sets should be estab- be enrolled because they do not want to have, for example,
lished for restorative trials; these are defined in consensus amalgam restorations, and, as a result, designing a clinical
between patients, practitioners and other stakeholders [22,35]. trial to address this still important research question [38] will
The resulting sets are minimum standards of outcomes to be include the risk of a non-representative sample of the popu-
assessed; they help to report on the most relevant aspects of lation. It is acknowledged that many of these disadvantages
trials, but also prevent selective reporting [10,36]. apply also to non-randomized clinical studies.
More recently, patient-based outcomes measures (PBOs)
have been emerged as an important aspect to complement
2 Time of follow-up
conventional clinical measures that have been the main focus
of oral health research [37]. The assessment of the opinion
of patients about their own health is a key point to evaluate Differences in effectiveness of therapies may only be mea-
the effectiveness of an intervention. In this way, the assess- sured after several years, as failure behaviour may vary -and
ment of the impact that restorations can have on patients’ oral one type of material may be more susceptible to caries and
health-related quality of life (OHRQoL) should be stimulated. the other to tooth fracture on the long term [33]. As a result,
The present digital revolution provides opportunities for long observation times are required, sometimes exceeding 10
designing new assessment methods that combine the need years to record all relevant effects and differences. To main-
for standardisation using a well-defined list of criteria and tain a population of trial participants over an extended period
data acquisition from electronic patient files and digital imag- is very challenging. Attrition bias is a common phenomenon in
ing. Intra-oral electronic photography and inspection of digital clinical research in dentistry, making it very difficult to achieve
bitewing radiographs may provide standardised information long observation times in clinical trials (Table 1). Recently,
on the quality of restorative work and provide insight on results from two clinical trials with a long observation time
the application of replacement criteria by practitioners. New were published by a Danish research group, but this is excep-
intra-oral scanning methods, including colour reproduction tional [39,40].
capacities have been developed, which might become impor-
tant tools in future clinical studies. However, patients still
have to attend to obtain images, so data acquisition remains 3 Inclusion bias
dependent on patients being available for recall and sufficient
resources to fund recall procedures. Also, images have to be
If inclusion criteria are not well defined, it may lead to
stored securely and evaluated using sophisticated method-
inclusion bias, as the restorations are placed for a variety of
ologies which are both time consuming and costly. Anyway,
different reasons including active caries, fracture due to brux-
dentistry should start to put effort on the establishment of
ism and aesthetic considerations. Moreover, it is likely that
guidelines advising on how dentists should record clinical data
in some clinical trials highly motivated patients with a good
and images to allow proper follow up of restorative treatments.
oral hygiene tend to be included, a feature which is seldom
mentioned in trial reports. A typical example of this is two
5. What is the ideal study design? randomized clinical trials comparing the longevity of amal-
gam and composite restorations in young children [17,19]. The
5.1. RCT inclusion criteria were that children should require one or
more restorations, which is likely oftentimes a result of pri-
The randomized clinical trial is most often considered to mary caries, indicating high caries experience. Obviously, the
be the ideal design for comparing different treatments in inclusion bias is that a high risk population is investigated, but
medicine and as a consequence, procedures and the use of dif- this is not mentioned in any of the relevant reports [11,17,41].
ferent materials in dentistry. However, as discussed, the RCT
approach has several disadvantages when testing restorative 4 Independent evaluation
materials:
Please cite this article in press as: Opdam NJM, et al. Clinical studies in restorative dentistry: New directions and new demands. Dent Mater
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#2 Survival analysis:
(“Survival” [All Fields] OR “Success” [All Fields] OR “Longevity” [All Fields] OR “Annual failure rate” [All Fields] OR
“Clinical evaluation” [All Fields] OR “Survival Analysis”[Mesh] OR “Survival Analysis” [All Fields] OR “Analysis,
Survival” [All Fields] OR “Analyses, Survival” [All Fields] OR ”Survival Analyses” [All Fields] OR “Failure” [All
Fields] OR “Dental Restoration Failure”[Mesh] OR “Dental Restoration Failure”[All Fields] OR “Failure, Dental
Restoration” [All Fields] OR “Restoration Failures, Dental” [All Fields] OR“ Failures, Dental Restoration” [All Fields]
OR“ Restoration Failure, Dental” [All Fields] OR“ Dental Restoration Failures” [All Fields])
Please cite this article in press as: Opdam NJM, et al. Clinical studies in restorative dentistry: New directions and new demands. Dent Mater
(2017), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dental.2017.08.187
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9. Statistical analysis Major confounders such as caries risk and bruxism should
be recorded as part of trial methodologies and appropriately
In the ideal RCT, all variables are standardised, with only considered during analyses. The time and reasons for any
the experimental variable differing between the test and interventions should also be recorded to allow discrimination
control groups. In such cases, the Kaplan Meier statistical between success, survival and failure, and to perform statisti-
model helps generate survival graphs and enables compar- cally valid survival analyses.
isons between experimental groups, for example a log-rank Different trial designs should be considered when planning
test which shows if survival curves are statistically different. to compare restorative treatments and materials: while ran-
However, in RCTs not all confounding variables are perfectly domised clinical trials reduce selection bias, their observation
balanced (accounting for all possible confounders during ran- times are usually short and sample sizes limited. Retrospec-
domisation is theoretically possible, but practically hard to tive and prospective practice based studies circumvent these
achieve). Parameters such as caries risk [33,42], bruxism [42], limitations, but have considerable risk of indication bias and
socioeconomic status [25], age [33,42], number of teeth in confounding which need to be dealt with appropriately. Per-
the dentition [19], as well as tooth type and details of the haps the answer lies in coordinated, multicentre studies of
practitioner(s) who treated the patient [19,45] should thus be different design, no one design being capable of yielding all the
recorded during the trial and included in the evaluation using required outcomes. Whatever the way forward funders and
multi-variate analyses. In planning prospective trials, the esti- sponsors of clinical research in restorative dentistry should
mation of the required sample size should take into account encourage investigators to come forward with new innovative
the need to undertake such analyses. approaches to answers priority questions.
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