Title: Treating Our Patients Using Endodontic and Implant Restorations
1Treating Our Patients Using Endodontic and
Implant Restorations
2Treatment Numbers
- Endodontic and implant restorations are performed
daily by dentists and specialists - For endodontic treatment, estimates for the year
2000 were 30 million endodontic procedures
annually (ADA) - Estimated number of patients receiving endosseous
implants - 1996 - 300,000-428,000 annually,
- 2000 - 910,000 annually
- future annual growth rate - 18.6
(Millenium Research Group)
3Treatment Numbers
40 increase annually 1997-2007
4Treatment Considerations
- Treatment planning for the future Endodontics,
fixed partial dentures or implants?
5Treatment Considerations
- The success rate of non-surgical root canal
treatment is unclear within the endodontic
literature. - (endodontics) in general practice, the success
rate can be 64 to 75. - Endodontic therapy may extend the life of the
tooth but very little is known on the extent of
tooth longevity.
6Implants vs. Endodontics
- The Academy of Osseointegrations 2006 workshop
on the state of the science of implant dentistry
entrusted Iqbal and Kim to systematically review
clinical studies of the survival of single-tooth
implants and endodontically treated and restored
teeth and to compare the results. - Iqbal MK, Kim S, 2007
7Implants vs. Endodontics
- Furthermore, in response to an ADA Foundation
request for proposals Torabinejad, et al,
conducted a systematic review of the clinical,
psychosocial, and economic outcomes of
endodontics, implants and FPDs. - Torabinejad, et al, 2007
8Implants vs. Endodontics
- Success criteria
- Problem areas
- Whos treating
- Publication bias
- Modern advances
9Apples vs. Oranges
- Success criteria
- Problem areas
- Whos treating
- Publication bias
- Modern advances
10Implants vs. Endodontics
- Success criteria
- Problem areas
- Whos treating
- Publication bias
- Modern advances
11Success Criteria
- Endodontic Criteria
- 1956, Strindberg proposes stringent radiographic
criteria - Strindberg LZ, 1956
12Success Criteria
- Endodontic Criteria
- 1956, Strindberg proposes radiographic criteria
- Beginning in 1966 and since, many authors suggest
radiographic criteria is ill advised - Bender IB, Seltzer S and Soltanoff W, 1966
- Van Nieuwenhuysen JP, et al, 1994
- Fristad I, et al, 2004
- Gutmann JL, 1992
- Seltzer S, 1988
13Success Criteria
- Endodontic Criteria
- 1956, Strindberg proposes radiographic criteria
- Beginning in 1966 and since, many authors suggest
radiographic criteria is ill advised - However, some studies still use Strindbergs
dated criteria. - Allen R, Newton C and Brown C, 1991
- Sundqvist G, et al, 1998
- Sjogren U, et al, 1990
- Farzaneh M, Abitbol S and Friedman S, 2004
14Success Criteria
- Endodontic Criteria
- 1956, Strindberg proposes radiographic criteria
- Beginning in 1966 and since, many authors suggest
radiographic criteria is ill advised - However, some studies still use Strindbergs
dated criteria. - Fristad and colleagues showed the potential for
late radiographic healing. - Fristad, Molven and Halse, 2004
15Success Criteria
16Success Criteria
17Endodontic Success Criteria
3-year recall
18Endodontic Success Criteria
19Endodontic Success Criteria
20Endodontic Success Criteria
12-month recall
21Success Criteria
- 1956, Strindberg proposes radiographic criteria
- Beginning in 1966 and since, many authors suggest
radiographic criteria is ill advised - However, some studies still use Strindbergs
dated criteria. - Fristad and colleagues showed the potential for
late radiographic healing. - Success or Survival?
- Iqbal MK, Kim S, 2007
22Success Criteria
- Success or Survival?
- The definition of success for dental implant
studies is often implant survival - Unlike implants and FPDs, RCTs aim to cure
existing disease - Weiger, et al, 1998
23Success Criteria
- Success or Survival?
- Unlike implants and FPDs, RCTs aim to cure
existing disease - Thus, RCT studies measure both the healing of
existing disease and the occurrence of new
disease. - Torabinejad, et al, 2007
24Success Criteria
- Success or Survival?
- It has been suggested that implant success
criteria are not routinely applied in much of the
implant outcomes literature - Salinas and Eckert, 2007
25Success Criteria
- Success or Survival?
- In essence, the use of lenient success criteria
in implant studies may translate to higher
success rates, while stringent criteria employed
in root canal prognostic studies may lead to
lower success rates. - Watson, et al, 1999
- Johnson, et al, 2000
- Wennstrom, et al, 2005
26Success Criteria
- In order to establish comparable comparisons, it
is critical that the same outcome measure is used
to assess both endodontic and implant procedures.
27Success Criteria
- In order to establish comparable comparisons, it
is critical that the same outcome measure is used
to assess both endodontic and implant procedures - Due to these differences in meanings of success,
it is probable survival rates will permit less
biased, albeit less informative, comparisons. - Doyle, et al, 2006
- Eckert and Wollan, 1998
- Creugers, et al, 2000
- Torabinejad, et al, 2007
28Success Criteria
- The Academy of Osseointegrations 2006 workshop
on the state of the science of implant dentistry
entrusted Iqbal and Kim to systematically review
clinical studies of the survival of single-tooth
implants and endodontically treated and restored
teeth and to compare the results. - Iqbal MK, Kim S, 2007
29Success Criteria
- Success or Survival?
- Iqbal MK, Kim S, 2007
30Success Criteria - Implants
- Two 3.75 x 18 implants were placed on 9, 10
sites - Implants appear osseointegrated
31Success Criteria - Implants
Initial visit pt presented with provisional
restorations
Esthetics case referred to Dr. Debra Johnson
32Implants vs. Endodontics
- Success criteria
- Problem areas
- Whos treating
- Publication bias
- Modern advances
33Restorative Impact
- Lazarski et al examined over 110,000 endodontic
cases, and found teeth that were not restored
were significantly more likely (gt4 X) to undergo
extraction. - Lazarski et al 2001
34Restorative Impact
- Lazarski et al examined over 110,000 endodontic
cases, and found teeth that were not restored
were significantly more likely (gt4 X) to undergo
extraction. - The restoration of an endodontically treated
tooth is considered a major determinant of its
survival. - Vire DE, 1991
- Siqueira JF, 2001
- Hoen MM, Pink FE, 2002
- Salehrabi R, Rotstein I, 2004
- Aquilino SA, Caplan DJ, 2002
- Sorensen JA, Martinoff JT, 1985
35Restorative Impact
- The Academy of Osseointegrations 2006 workshop
on the state of the science of implant dentistry
entrusted Iqbal and Kim to systematically review
clinical studies of the survival of single-tooth
implants and endodontically treated and restored
teeth and to compare the results. - Iqbal MK, Kim S, 2007
36Restorative Impact
37Restorative Impact
38Restorative Impact
39Restorative Impact
22-month recall
40Restorative Impact
- The restoration of an endodontically treated
tooth is considered a major determinant of its
survival. - More prosthetic complications with implants.
- Goodacre CJ, et al, 2003
- Iqbal MK, Kim S, 2007
- Doyle et al 2006
41Bone Loss Around Implants
- With implant placement, 1 mm of bone is loss
during the first year of placement, with an
additional 0.1mm annually. - Can vary with implant type/material
42Bone Loss Around Implants
Bone Loss (mm)
n455 Error bars S.E.M.
43Cost to Patient
- Analysis of 2005 insurance data concluded that
restored single-tooth implants cost 75-90 more
than similarly restored endodontic-treated teeth
44Cost to Patient
- Analysis of 2005 insurance data concluded that
restored single-tooth implants cost 75-90 more
than similarly restored endodontic-treated teeth - Post-treatment problems can increase this cost
difference
45Cost to Patient
130 Increase
Average Price ()
46Implants vs. Endodontics
- Success criteria
- Problem areas
- Whos treating
- Publication bias
- Modern advances
47Whos Treating?
- Historically, implants placed by specialists,
while many endodontic studies were conducted on
patients treated by dental students. - Aquilino SA, Caplan DJ, 2002
- Bergman B, et al, 1989
- Dammaschke T, et al, 2003
- Lynch CD, et al, 2004
- Mentink AG, et al, 1993
48Whos Treating?
- Of 13,047 identified studies, 147 articles from
the endo, prosth and implant literature were
systematically reviewed. - Torabinejad, et al, 2007
-
49Whos Treating?
- Of 13,047 identified studies, 147 articles from
the endo, prosth and implant literature were
systematically reviewed. - Torabinejad, et al, 2007
- GPs or
Specialists - Students
- Implant 0 87
- Prostho 29 35
- Endo 63 29
50Whos Treating?
51Whos Treating?
52Whos Treating?
53Whos Treating?
54Implants vs. Endodontics
- Success criteria
- Problem areas
- Whos treating
- Publication bias
- Modern advances
55Publication Bias
- More likely to exist when a particular brand of
implant is studied. While endodontics is mostly
generic. - Schnitman PA, Shulman LB, 1979
- Iqbal MK, Kim S, 2007
- Andersson B, et al, 1998
- Brocard D, et al, 2000
- Deporter DA, et al, 1998
56Publication Bias
- More likely to exist when a particular brand of
implant is studied. While endodontics is mostly
generic. - Furthermore, 13 of the implant studies had an
evaluator that was different than the operator,
while 88 of the endo papers had independent
evaluators. - Torabinejad, et al, 2007
57Publication Bias
- More likely to exist when a particular brand of
implant is studied. While endodontics is mostly
generic. - Furthermore, 13 of the implant studies had an
evaluator that was different than the operator,
while 88 of the endo papers had independent
evaluators - the authors' results confirm the presence of
publication bias in implant dentistry
literature - Moradi DR, et al, 2006
58Implants vs. Endodontics
- Success criteria
- Problem areas
- Whos treating
- Publication bias
- Modern advances
59Modern Advances
- Both Iqbal and Kims as well as Torabinejad and
colleagues systemic reviews were conducted
using material from previous decades and
therefore reflect the treatment approaches
prevalent at that time. - Iqbal and Kim, 2007
60Modern Advances
- Implants
- New implant shape/design
- New surface modifications
- New implant-abutment interfaces
- Immediate loading
- Mini implants
- Etc
61Modern Advances
- Implants
- New implant shape/design
- New surface modifications
- New implant-abutment interfaces
- Immediate loading
- Mini implants
- Etc
- Endodontics
- NiTi instrumentation
- Apex locators
- Surgical operating microscope
- Digital radiography
- Materials MTA, MTAD, Resilon
- DNA hybridization, PCR, etc
- Etc
62Case Selection
63Case Selection
64Case Selection
65Case Selection Fx 20
66Case Selection
67Case Selection
1-month recall
68Case Selection
69Case Selection
70Case Selection
71Case Selection
72Case Selection
13-month recall
73Implants vs. Endodontics
- The Academy of Osseointegrations 2006 workshop
on the state of the science of implant dentistry
entrusted Iqbal and Kim to systematically review
clinical studies of the survival of single-tooth
implants and endodontically treated and restored
teeth and to compare the results. - Iqbal MK, Kim S, 2007
74Implants vs. Endodontics
- The Academy of Osseointegrations 2006 workshop
on the state of the science of implant dentistry
entrusted Iqbal and Kim to systematically review
clinical studies of the survival of single-tooth
implants and endodontically treated and restored
teeth and to compare the results. - Iqbal MK, Kim S, 2007
- AND
75Implants vs. Endodontics
- The Academy of Osseointegrations 2006 workshop
on the state of the science of implant dentistry
entrusted Iqbal and Kim to systematically review
clinical studies of the survival of single-tooth
implants and endodontically treated and restored
teeth and to compare the results. - Furthermore, in response to an ADA Foundation
request for proposals Torabinejad, et al,
conducted a systematic review of the clinical,
psychosocial, and economic outcomes of
endodontics, implants and FPDs. - Torabinejad, et al, 2007
76Implants vs. Endodontics
- in periodontally sound teeth having pulpal
and/or periradicular pathosis, root canal therapy
resulted inequal outcomes (97) to extraction
and replacement of the missing tooth with an
implant. - Torabinejad, et al, 2007
77Implants vs. Endodontics
- No difference in the survival rates between the
two treatment modalities. - Iqbal MK, Kim S, 2007
78Implants vs. Endodontics
n4477
Unpublished data from AAE Foundation - Bowles,
Eleazer, Drum Goodis 2008
79Implants vs. Endodontics
- Endodontic therapy should be given priority in
treatment planning for periodontally sound single
teeth with pulpal and or periradicular pathology.
80Implants vs. Endodontics
- Endodontic therapy should be given priority in
treatment planning for periodontally sound single
teeth with pulpal and or periradicular pathology. - Implants should be given priority in treatment
planning for teeth that are planned for extraction
81Implants vs. Endodontics
- The decision to treat a compromised tooth
endodontically or replace it with an implant must
be based on factors other than treatment outcome
since the outcomes are similar. - Iqbal and Kim 2008
82Implants vs. Endodontics
-
- CASE SELECTION
- CASE SELECTION
- CASE SELECTION
83Conclusion
- Functional survival rates are high for both
treatments
84Conclusion
- Functional survival rates are high for both
treatments - Endodontic treatment on a hopeless tooth is just
as unethical as extracting a restorable tooth and
replacing it with an implant
85Conclusion
- Functional survival rates are high for both
treatments - Endodontic treatment on a hopeless tooth is just
as unethical as extracting a restorable tooth and
replacing it with an implant - Since outcomes are similar with either treatment,
decisions should be based on other factors such
as restorability, costs, esthetics, potential
adverse outcomes and ethical factors