Journal article

Clinical effectiveness of restorative materials for the restoration of carious primary teeth without pulp therapy: a systematic review


Authors listAmend, S.; Boutsiouki, C.; Bekes, K.; Kloukos, D.; Lygidakis, N. N.; Frankenberger, R.; Kraemer, N.

Publication year2022

Pages727-759

JournalEuropean Archives of Paediatric Dentistry

Volume number23

Issue number5

ISSN1818-6300

eISSN1996-9805

Open access statusHybrid

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s40368-022-00725-7

PublisherSpringer


Abstract

Purpose To systematically search the available evidence and evaluate the clinical effectiveness of restorative materials for restoration of carious primary teeth. The findings aimed to support the European Academy of Paediatric Dentistry (EAPD) guidelines development.

Methods Literature search was performed by searching 4 electronic databases for eligible randomised controlled clinical trials (RCTs) comparing restorative materials for the restoration of carious primary teeth up to December 28th, 2020. Quality assessment was performed with the revised Cochrane risk-of-bias tool for randomized trials (RoB 2).

Results Of 1685 identified articles 29 RCTs were finally deemed as eligible for inclusion. Annual failure rates were: Amalgam 1-28%; atraumatic restorative treatment 1.2-37.1%; glass-ionomer cement (GIC) 7.6-16.6%, metal-reinforced GIC 29.9%, resin-modified GIC 1.9-16.9%, high-viscosity GIC 2.9-25.6%; glass carbomer <= 46.2%; compomer 0-14.7%; composite resin (CR) 0-19.5%, bulk-fill CR 0-16.9%; zirconia crowns 3.3%, composite strip crowns 15%, and preformed metal crowns (Hall-Technique) 3.1%. Secondary caries, poor marginal adaptation, loss of retention, and fracture of restoration were reported as reasons for failure. Four studies were evaluated at unclear and 25 at high risk of bias. Clinical and methodological heterogeneity, and the diversity of tested materials across included studies did not allow for meta-analyses.

Conclusions Within the limitations of this systematic review, namely, the heterogeneity and the overall high risk of bias among included studies, clear recommendations based on solid evidence for the best restorative approach in primary teeth cannot be drawn. There is a need for future thoroughly implemented RCTs evaluating restorations in primary teeth to close this knowledge gap.




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleAmend, S., Boutsiouki, C., Bekes, K., Kloukos, D., Lygidakis, N., Frankenberger, R., et al. (2022) Clinical effectiveness of restorative materials for the restoration of carious primary teeth without pulp therapy: a systematic review, European Archives of Paediatric Dentistry, 23(5), pp. 727-759. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40368-022-00725-7

APA Citation styleAmend, S., Boutsiouki, C., Bekes, K., Kloukos, D., Lygidakis, N., Frankenberger, R., & Kraemer, N. (2022). Clinical effectiveness of restorative materials for the restoration of carious primary teeth without pulp therapy: a systematic review. European Archives of Paediatric Dentistry. 23(5), 727-759. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40368-022-00725-7


Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 11:41