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http://cris.unibe.edu.do/handle/123456789/521| Título : | How did CariesCare International perform under pandemic conditions in children? A one-year, multicentre, single-group, interventional study | Autores: | Martignon, S. Beltrán, E. O. Douglas, G. V. A. Newton, J. T. Pitts, N. B. Deery, C. Carletto-Körber, F. Cifuentes, O. L. Fortich, N. Chavarria, N. Echeverri, B. Kuzmina, I. Muller-Bolla, M. Ricardo Osorio, J. R. Ramos, K. Sanjuán, J. San-Martin, M. Squassi, A. Villena, R. Aïem, E. Cáceres-Matta, S. Carreño, L. M. Cerezo, M. P. Conrado, A. Hermida, L. Llamas, J. I. Oña, J. A. Sanabria, A. Said, D. Sarrazola, A. Sorazabal, A. Zelada, D. Abreu-Placeres, Ninoska Braga, M. Lara, J. S. Melo, P. Areias, C. Falabello de Luca, A. C. Tello, R. Yunes-Fragoso, Paula M. Martinez-Mier, E. A. Ferreira Zandona, A. Cortes, A. |
Investigadores (UNIBE): | Abreu-Placeres, Ninoska Yunes Fragoso, Paula M. |
Afiliaciones : | Centro de Investigación en Biomateriales y Odontología (CIBO) Centro de Investigación en Biomateriales y Odontología (CIBO) |
Área de investigación : | Ciencias de la Salud | Fecha de publicación : | 4-ago-2025 | Editorial : | Nature Publishing Group | Publicado en: | British Dental Journal, Online publication, 1-10; 2025 | Revista: | British Dental Journal | Resumen : | Introduction: CariesCare International (CCI) is a practice-friendly, health outcomes-focused, patient-centred, risk-based approach to caries management designed for the practice. The unfeasibility of a randomised clinical trial and of aerosol generating procedures (AGPs) during the COVID-19 pandemic to test the caries control effectiveness of CCI shifted it to a non-AGP, reduced on-site consultation, single-interventional study. Aim This 12-month, multicentre, single-group, interventional study aimed at primarily assessing the control of caries progression of a pandemic CCI-adapted protocol in children. Methods: In total, 17 centres (n≥ 20, 3-8-year-old children/centre) were included. Trained examiners assessed (baseline: T0; one-year follow-up: T1y): CCI caries risk; oral health-related behaviours; decayed, missing and filled teeth (primary, permanent) with the epidemiological merged International Caries Detection and Assessment System (severity, activity); dental sepsis; and toothache. Trained practitioners performed one-year CCI-adapted personalised care. Dental care process acceptance was assessed in parents and dentists. Results: A total of 16 centres finished the study (n = 337, 78.6%; mean age: 5.5 ± 1.6 years). There was a T0-T1y decrease in the mean number of combined primary and permanent tooth surfaces with caries lesions (8.4 ± 9.7 to 6.2 ± 7.6), with most children showing control of caries progression (75.1%), high caries risk (86.6%) and non-adequate oral-health behaviour (72.7%) (p <0.05). CCI acceptance was very high in parents and high/very high in dentists. Discussion: The limitations given by the pandemic challenges, the single-interventional study design, and the non-AGP and reduced in-office-consultation adaptations, might as well highlight the shown caries progression control, feasibility and acceptance of CCI. Conclusion: The one-year implementation of CCI showed control of caries progression and of risk and high acceptance among parents and dentists. |
URI : | http://cris.unibe.edu.do/handle/123456789/521 | DOI : | 10.1038/s41415-025-8640-4 |
| Aparece en las colecciones: | Publicaciones del CIBO-UNIBE Publicaciones indexadas en Scopus / Web of Science |
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