4.7 Article

Randomized Clinical Trial on Sodium Fluoride with Tricalcium Phosphate

Journal

JOURNAL OF DENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 100, Issue 1, Pages 66-73

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0022034520952031

Keywords

child; dental care; dental caries; dentin; silver; fluorides

Funding

  1. Seed Fund for Basic Research [201810159024]

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The study found that applying a varnish with fTCP semiannually was more effective in arresting dentine caries in primary teeth compared to without fTCP, particularly on buccal/lingual surfaces, anterior teeth, with dental plaque coverage, and in children from low-income families.
This 24-mo randomized controlled trial was based on a double-blind parallel design, and it compared the effectiveness of 2 fluoride application protocols in arresting dentine caries in primary teeth. Three-year-old children with active dentine caries were recruited and randomly allocated to 2 treatment groups. Children in group A received a semiannual application of a 25% silver nitrate (AgNO3) solution followed by a commercially available varnish with 5% sodium fluoride (NaF) on the carious tooth surfaces. Children in group B received a semiannual application of a 25% AgNO(3)solution followed by another commercially available varnish with 5% NaF containing functionalized tricalcium phosphate (fTCP). Carious tooth surfaces that were hard when probing were classified as arrested. Intention-to-treat analysis and a hierarchical generalized linear model were undertaken. A total of 408 children with 1,831 tooth surfaces with active dentine caries were recruited at baseline, and 356 children (87%) with 1,607 tooth surfaces (88%) were assessed after 24 mo. At the 24-mo evaluation, the mean (SD) number of arrested carious tooth surfaces per child were 1.8 (2.2) and 2.6 (3.3) for group A (without fTCP) and group B (with fTCP), respectively (P= 0.003). The arrest rates at the tooth surface level were 42% for group A and 57% for group B (P< 0.001). Results of the hierarchical generalized linear model indicated that protocol B (with fTCP) had a higher predicted probability (PP = 0.656) in arresting dentine caries than protocol A (without fTCP; PP = 0.500) when the carious lesions were on buccal/lingual surfaces, were on anterior teeth, had dental plaque coverage, and were in children from low-income families (P= 0.046). In conclusion, protocol B, which applied a 25% AgNO(3)solution followed by a commercially available 5% NaF varnish with fTCP semiannually, is more effective in arresting dentine caries in primary teeth as compared with protocol A, which applied a 25% AgNO(3)solution followed by another commercially available 5% NaF varnish without fTCP semiannually (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03423797).

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