Longevity and risk factors of CAD-CAM manufactured implant-supported all-ceramic crowns - A prospective, multi-center, practice-based cohort study.
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
November 2024
Publication Type
Article
Author
Kramer, E J | |
Reiss, B | |
Subject(s)
Series
Dental Materials
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
0109-5641
Publisher
Elsevier
Language
English
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
39322444
Description
Objectives
The aim of this prospective, multi-center, practice-based cohort study was to analyze factors associated with the success of implant supported all-ceramic single-unit crowns, made by computer-aided-design/computer-aided-manufacturing (CAD-CAM).Methods
All-ceramic crowns placed in a private practice-based research network (Ceramic Success Analysis, AG Keramik) were analyzed. Data from 567patients with CAD-CAM implant supported all-ceramic crowns placed between 2008-2023 by 54dentists were evaluated. Firstly, all crowns with at least one follow-up control were included (n = 907). Secondly, all crowns being followed up for ≥ 5years and all failures were included (n = 151). At the latest follow-up visit, crowns were considered as successful (not failed) if they were still in function without the need for additional therapy. Multi-level Cox proportional hazards models were used to evaluate the association between a range of predictors and time of success.Results
Within a mean follow-up period (SD) of 2.5 (2)years (first scenario) and 6.2 (1.2)years (second scenario) [maximum:12years], 27crowns failed (annual failure rate [AFR]:0.74 %). The main failure types were decementation, (n = 11), fracture of the ceramic (n = 4) or Ti-Base (n = 4). In 5-year-scenario, crowns fabricated in the laboratory had 26times lower failure rate than those fabricated chairside (95 %CI:0.0-0.7;p = 0.038). Furthermore, the use of a silane (HR:0.051;95 %CI:0.0-0.5;p = 0.014) and etching of the ceramic (HR:0.053;95 %CI:0.0-0.8;p = 0.035) resulted in a significantly higher risk for failure than their non-use.Significance
For CAD-CAM manufactured implant supported all-ceramic crowns, high success rates were found in up to 12-year evaluation. Furthermore, after 5years, no patient-or implant-level factors, but operative-level factor (i.e.fabrication method, use of silane/etching) were significantly associated with failure. The study was registered in the German Clinical Trials Register (DRKS-ID: DRKS00020271).
The aim of this prospective, multi-center, practice-based cohort study was to analyze factors associated with the success of implant supported all-ceramic single-unit crowns, made by computer-aided-design/computer-aided-manufacturing (CAD-CAM).Methods
All-ceramic crowns placed in a private practice-based research network (Ceramic Success Analysis, AG Keramik) were analyzed. Data from 567patients with CAD-CAM implant supported all-ceramic crowns placed between 2008-2023 by 54dentists were evaluated. Firstly, all crowns with at least one follow-up control were included (n = 907). Secondly, all crowns being followed up for ≥ 5years and all failures were included (n = 151). At the latest follow-up visit, crowns were considered as successful (not failed) if they were still in function without the need for additional therapy. Multi-level Cox proportional hazards models were used to evaluate the association between a range of predictors and time of success.Results
Within a mean follow-up period (SD) of 2.5 (2)years (first scenario) and 6.2 (1.2)years (second scenario) [maximum:12years], 27crowns failed (annual failure rate [AFR]:0.74 %). The main failure types were decementation, (n = 11), fracture of the ceramic (n = 4) or Ti-Base (n = 4). In 5-year-scenario, crowns fabricated in the laboratory had 26times lower failure rate than those fabricated chairside (95 %CI:0.0-0.7;p = 0.038). Furthermore, the use of a silane (HR:0.051;95 %CI:0.0-0.5;p = 0.014) and etching of the ceramic (HR:0.053;95 %CI:0.0-0.8;p = 0.035) resulted in a significantly higher risk for failure than their non-use.Significance
For CAD-CAM manufactured implant supported all-ceramic crowns, high success rates were found in up to 12-year evaluation. Furthermore, after 5years, no patient-or implant-level factors, but operative-level factor (i.e.fabrication method, use of silane/etching) were significantly associated with failure. The study was registered in the German Clinical Trials Register (DRKS-ID: DRKS00020271).
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File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
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1-s2.0-S0109564124002793-main.pdf | text | Adobe PDF | 1.44 MB | Attribution (CC BY 4.0) | published |