RETRACTED: Guided tissue regeneration for periodontal infra-bony defects (Retracted Article)

被引:232
|
作者
Needleman, I. G. [1 ]
Worthington, H. V. [1 ]
Giedrys-Leeper, E. [1 ]
Tucker, R. J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ London, Univ Coll London, Dept Periodontol, Eastman Dent Inst Oral Hlth Care Sci, London WC1X 8LD, England
来源
COCHRANE DATABASE OF SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS | 2006年 / 02期
关键词
D O I
10.1002/14651858.CD001724.pub2
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Background Conventional treatment of destructive periodontal (gum) disease arrests the disease but does not usually regain the bone support or connective tissue lost in the disease process. Guided tissue regeneration (GTR) is a surgical procedure that specifically aims to regenerate the periodontal tissues when the disease is advanced and could overcome some of the limitations of conventional therapy. Objectives To assess the efficacy of GTR in the treatment of periodontal infra-bony defects measured against conventional surgery (open flap debridement (OFD)) and factors affecting outcomes. Search strategy We conducted an electronic search of the Cochrane Oral Health Group Trials Register, MEDLINE and EMBASE up to April 2004. Handsearching included Journal of Periodontology, Journal of Clinical Periodontology, Journal of Periodontal Research and bibliographies of all relevant papers and review articles up to April 2004. In addition, we contacted experts/groups/companies involved in surgical research to find other trials or unpublished material or to clarify ambiguous or missing data and posted requests for data on two periodontal electronic discussion groups. Selection criteria Randomised, controlled trials (RCTs) of at least 12 months duration comparing guided tissue regeneration (with or without graft materials) with open flap debridement for the treatment of periodontal infra-bony defects. Furcation involvements and studies specifically treating aggressive periodontitis were excluded. Data collection and analysis Screening of possible studies and data extraction was conducted independently. The methodological quality of studies was assessed in duplicate using individual components and agreement determined by Kappa scores. Methodological quality was used in sensitivity analyses to test the robustness of the conclusions. The Cochrane Oral Health Group statistical guidelines were followed and the results expressed as mean differences (MD and 95% CI) for continuous outcomes and risk ratios (RR and 95% CI) for dichotomous outcomes calculated using random-effects models. Any heterogeneity was investigated. The primary outcome measure was change in clinical attachment. Main results The search produced 626 titles, of these 596 were clearly not relevant to the review. The full text of 32 studies of possible relevance was obtained and 15 studies were excluded. Therefore 17 RCTs were included in this review, 16 studies testing GTR alone and two testing GTR + bone substitutes (one study had both test treatment arms). No tooth loss was reported in any study although these data are incomplete where patient follow up was not complete. For attachment level change, the mean difference between GTR and OFD was 1.22 mm (95% CI Random Effects: 0.80 to 1.64, chi squared for heterogeneity 69.1 (df = 15), P < 0.001, I-2 = 78%) and for GTR + bone substitutes was 1.25 mm (95% CI 0.89 to 1.61, chi squared for heterogeneity 0.01 (df = 1), P = 0.91). GTR showed a significant benefit when comparing the numbers of sites failing to gain 2 mm attachment with risk ratio 0.54 (95% CI Random Effects: 0.31 to 0.96, chi squared for heterogeneity 8.9 (df = 5), P = 0.11). The number needed to treat (NNT) for GTR to achieve one extra site gaining 2 mm or more attachment over open flap debridement was therefore 8 (95% CI 5 to 33), based on an incidence of 28% of sites in the control group failing to gain 2 mm or more of attachment. For baseline incidences in the range of the control groups of 3% and 55% the NNTs are 71 and 4. Probing depth reduction was greater for GTR than OFD: 1.21 mm (95% CI 0.53 to 1.88, chi squared for heterogeneity 62.9 (df = 10), P < 0.001, I-2 = 84%) or GTR + bone substitutes, weighted mean difference 1.24 mm (95% CI 0.89 to 1.59, chi squared for heterogeneity 0.03 (df = 1), P = 0.85). For gingival recession, a statistically significant difference between GTR and open flap debridement controls was evident (mean difference 0.26 mm (95% CI Random Effects: 0.08, 0.43, chi squared for heterogeneity 2.7 (df = 8), P = 0.95), with a greater change in recession from baseline for the control group. Regarding hard tissue probing at surgical re-entry, a statistically significant greater gain was found for GTR compared with open flap debridement. This amounted to a weighted mean difference of 1.39 mm (95% CI 1.08 to 1.71, chi squared for heterogeneity 0.85 (df = 2), P = 0.65). For GTR + bone substitutes the difference was greater, with mean difference 3.37 mm (95% CI 3.14 to 3.61). Adverse effects were generally minor although with an increased treatment time for GTR. Exposure of the barrier membrane was frequently reported with a lack of evidence of an effect on healing. Authors' conclusions GTR has a greater effect on probing measures of periodontal treatment than open flap debridement, including improved attachment gain, reduced pocket depth, less increase in gingival recession and more gain in hard tissue probing at re-entry surgery. However there is marked variability between studies and the clinical relevance of these changes is unknown. As a result, it is difficult to draw general conclusions about the clinical benefit of GTR. Whilst there is evidence that GTR can demonstrate a significant improvement over conventional open flap surgery, the factors affecting outcomes are unclear from the literature and these might include study conduct issues such as bias. Therefore, patients and health professionals need to consider the predictability of the technique compared with other methods of treatment before making final decisions on use. Since trial reports were often incomplete, we recommend that future trials should follow the CONSORT statement both in their conduct and reporting. There is therefore little value in future research repeating simple, small efficacy studies. The priority should be to identify factors associated with improved outcomes as well as investigating outcomes relevant to patients. Types of research might include large observational studies to generate hypotheses for testing in clinical trials, qualitative studies on patient-centred outcomes and trials exploring innovative analytic methods such as multilevel modelling. Open flap surgery should remain the control comparison in these studies.
引用
收藏
页数:29
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Guided tissue regeneration for periodontal infra-bony defects (2019, CD001724, 2019)
    Needleman, I
    Worthington, H., V
    Giedrys-Leeper, E.
    Tucker, R.
    COCHRANE DATABASE OF SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS, 2019, (05): : CD001724
  • [2] OSSEOUS REPAIR IN INFRA-BONY PERIODONTAL DEFECTS
    POLSON, AM
    HEIJL, LC
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PERIODONTOLOGY, 1978, 5 (01) : 13 - 23
  • [3] RETRACTED: Observation on the Effect of Bone Grafting Alone and Guided Tissue Regeneration Combined with Bone Grafting to Repair Periodontal Intraosseous Defects (Retracted Article)
    Yuan, Yongping
    Zhao, Jiajia
    He, Nv
    EVIDENCE-BASED COMPLEMENTARY AND ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE, 2021, 2021
  • [4] The Use of Beta-Tricalcium Phosphate and Bovine Bone Matrix in the Guided Tissue Regeneration Treatment of Deep Infra-Bony Defects
    Lukovic, Natalija
    Zelic, Obrad
    Cakic, Sasa
    Petrovic, Vanja
    SRPSKI ARHIV ZA CELOKUPNO LEKARSTVO, 2009, 137 (11-12) : 607 - 612
  • [5] Effect of soft laser and bioactive glass on bone regeneration in the treatment of infra-bony defects (a clinical study)
    Nayer S. AboElsaad
    Mena Soory
    Laila M. A. Gadalla
    Laila I. Ragab
    Stephen Dunne
    Khaled R. Zalata
    Chris Louca
    Lasers in Medical Science, 2009, 24 : 387 - 395
  • [6] Effect of soft laser and bioactive glass on bone regeneration in the treatment of infra-bony defects (a clinical study)
    AboElsaad, Nayer S.
    Soory, Mena
    Gadalla, Laila M. A.
    Ragab, Laila I.
    Dunne, Stephen
    Zalata, Khaled R.
    Louca, Chris
    LASERS IN MEDICAL SCIENCE, 2009, 24 (03) : 387 - 395
  • [7] Treatment of infra-bony periodontal defects using a collagen membrane and a bone substitute of equine origin - a pilot study
    Izidoro, C.
    Lobato, J.
    Vilhena, M.
    Nemesio, M.
    Proenca, L.
    Mendes, J.
    Alves, R.
    ANNALS OF MEDICINE, 2021, 53 : S65 - S66
  • [8] Tricalcium phosphate (-containing) biomaterials in the treatment of periodontal infra-bony defects: A systematic review and meta-analysis
    Liu, Chun Ching
    Solderer, Alex
    Heumann, Christian
    Attin, Thomas
    Schmidlin, Patrick R.
    JOURNAL OF DENTISTRY, 2021, 114
  • [9] RETRACTED: Enamel Matrix Derivatives for Periodontal Regeneration: Recent Developments and Future Perspectives (Retracted Article)
    Fan, Liping
    Wu, Dan
    JOURNAL OF HEALTHCARE ENGINEERING, 2022, 2022
  • [10] RETRACTED: Recent strategies of the regeneration of central nervous system by tissue engineering techniques (Retracted Article)
    Kim, Soon Hee
    Oh, A. Young
    Jung, Su Hyun
    Hong, Hyun Hye
    Choi, Jin Hee
    Hong, Hee Kyung
    Jeon, Na Ri
    Kang, Young Sun
    Shin, Hyung-Shik
    Rhee, John M.
    Khang, Gilson
    TISSUE ENGINEERING AND REGENERATIVE MEDICINE, 2008, 5 (03) : 370 - 387