J Dent. 2024 Aug 3:105276. doi: 10.1016/j.jdent.2024.105276. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
OBJECTIVES: The aim of this systematic review and meta-analysis was to evaluate the masking success of bleaching and/or resin infiltration treatment of fluorotic lesions in anterior teeth of adults and adolescents.
DATA SOURCES: PubMed, Cochrane Library, and Embase were systematically searched from the beginning of documentation to December 31, 2023.
PRIMARY OUTCOME WAS THE NUMBER OF MASKED TEETH: A tooth was considered masked when the color difference (ΔE CIE76) between fluorotic areas and the surrounding sound enamel was ≤ 3.7 and unmasked if ΔE > 3.7. Secondary outcomes were mean ΔE values between fluorotic and sound enamel reported for a treatment group at baseline and after any intervention as well as patient satisfaction.
STUDY SELECTION: Of 1575 search results 4 publications met the inclusion criteria, comprising 230 treated anterior teeth with fluorosis in 47 patients. Meta-analyses were performed comparing the result after treatment (bleaching, resin infiltration, or bleaching followed by resin infiltration) to baseline.
RESULTS: Bleaching and resin infiltration were suitable intervention strategies to improve the esthetics of fluorosis affected anterior teeth, with a combination of both treatment approaches being particularly effective in reducing the color difference between fluorotic defects and the surrounding sound enamel below the acceptability thresholds of 3.7 (success rate [95%CI]: 0.75 [0.44, 1.06]). Patient satisfaction increased after treatments, indicating a beneficial impact on their mental health. The overall bias of the included studies was 2.5 (ROBINS-I analysis tool).
CONCLUSION: There is evidence that resin infiltration with preceding bleaching therapy is more effective in masking fluorotic lesions in anterior teeth than bleaching alone. The combination therapy also showed a tendency towards higher success rates compared to infiltration alone. However, this difference was statistically not significant, and more studies are needed to further assess the efficacy of specific treatments and their combinations as well as the certainty in the evidence. The methodologic heterogeneity of study designs regarding estimation of color difference before and after treatment and bleaching protocols calls for unification in future studies.
CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: Results of this systematic review and meta-analysis revealed the combination of bleaching followed by resin infiltration as efficacious approach for masking fluorotic lesions in young adults. While resin infiltration alone improves the aesthetic appearance of fluorotic lesions, dentists should consider a combined bleaching-infiltration regimen to achieve more favorable clinical outcome for their patients.
PMID:39103078 | DOI:10.1016/j.jdent.2024.105276