4.7 Article

A clinical evaluation of implants in irradiated oral cancer patients

Journal

JOURNAL OF DENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 81, Issue 12, Pages 856-859

Publisher

INT AMER ASSOC DENTAL RESEARCHI A D R/A A D R
DOI: 10.1177/154405910208101212

Keywords

dental implants; irradiation; osseointegration; prosthetic reconstruction; oral cancer

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In this prospective study, we determined the effects of the time interval between irradiation and implant therapy, implant location, bone-resection surgery, and irradiation dose on implant survival. We analyzed the survival of 446 implants inserted after radiotherapy over a period of up to 14 years in 130 consecutive patients treated for oral cancer. The 10-year overall Kaplan-Meier implant survival percentage is 78%. The difference in survival percentages of implants inserted < 1 year and greater than or equal to 1 year after irradiation (76% and 81%, respectively) is not significant. We concluded that implant survival is significantly influenced by the location (maxilla or mandible, 59% and 85%, respectively; p = 0.001), by the incidence of bone-resection surgery in the jaw where the implant was installed (p = 0.04), and by the irradiation dose at the implant site (< 50 Gray or greater than or equal to 50 Gray, p = 0.05).

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