Effectiveness of the ICCMS caries management system for children: a 3-year multicentre randomised controlled trial

Authors

  • Stefania Martignon a UNICA – Caries Research Unit, Research Department, Universidad El Bosque, Bogotá, Colombia
  • Andrea Cortes a UNICA – Caries Research Unit, Research Department, Universidad El Bosque, Bogotá, Colombia
  • Luis Fernando Gamboa a UNICA – Caries Research Unit, Research Department, Universidad El Bosque, Bogotá, Colombia
  • Sofia Jácome-Liévano a UNICA – Caries Research Unit, Research Department, Universidad El Bosque, Bogotá, Colombia
  • Maria Cristina Arango-De-la-Cruz b Escuela de Odontología, Facultad de Salud, Programa Universidad de Valle, Cali, Colombia
  • Olga Lucia Cifuentes-Aguirre c Programa de Odontología, Universidad Autónoma de Manizales, Manizales, Colombia
  • Natalia Fortich-Mesa d School of Dentistry, Corporación Universitaroa Rafael Núñez, Cartagena, Colombia
  • Ketty Ramos-Martínez e School of Dentistry, Universidad de Cartagena, Cartagena, Colombia
  • Johanna Sanjuán-Acero f Paedriatric Dentistry Department, Fundación Universitaria de Colegios de Colombia (UNICOC), Bogotá, Colombia
  • Lizelia Alfaro a UNICA – Caries Research Unit, Research Department, Universidad El Bosque, Bogotá, Colombia
  • Lofthy Mejía a UNICA – Caries Research Unit, Research Department, Universidad El Bosque, Bogotá, Colombia
  • Margarita Usuga-Vacca a UNICA – Caries Research Unit, Research Department, Universidad El Bosque, Bogotá, Colombia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1080/00016357.2022.2038263

Keywords:

Dental caries, randomised controlled trial, children, comprehensive dental care, conservative care, guideline

Abstract

Objective

This 3-year multicentre randomised controlled trial compared, in 6-7-year-old Colombian children, the effectiveness of the ICCMS (International Caries Classification and Management System) with a conventional caries-management system (CCMS) in terms of individual caries-risk, caries lesions, and secondarily, oral-health-related knowledge/attitudes/practices, and number of appointments.

Material and methods

With ethical approval, 240 6–7-year olds from six Colombian clinics were recruited. Trained examiners conducted the following baseline/follow-up assessments: Caries risk (Cariogram-ICCMS); caries severity/activity staging (ICDAS-merged combined radiographic/visual); sealants/fillings/missing teeth, and oral-health-related knowledge, attitudes and practices. Children received their randomly allocated (ICCMS/CCMS) care from dental practitioners. Outcomes: caries-risk control (children); caries-progression control (tooth surfaces); oral-health-related knowledge/attitudes/practices improvement (parents/children), and appointments’ number (children). Descriptive and non-parametric/parametric bivariate analyses were performed.

Results

Three-year-follow-up: n = 187 (77.9%; ICCMS: n = 92; CCMS: n = 95) disclosed a baseline-to-3-year overall high-caries-risk children decrease (ICCMS: 60.9–0%, p < .001; CCMS: 54.7–5.3%, p < .001) (p > .05). ICCMS versus CCMS showed: fewer tooth-surface caries progression (6.2% vs 7.1%, p = .010) and fewer active-caries lesions (49.8% vs. 59.1%, p < .05); higher proportion of children with ≥2/day fluoride-toothpaste tooth-brushing practice (p < .05); similar mean number of appointments (10.9 ± 5.9 vs. 10.0 ± 3.8, p = .15).

Conclusion

Both caries-management systems showed similar effectiveness in caries-risk control, with ICCMS more effectively controlling tooth-surface caries progression and improving toothbrushing practices.

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Published

2022-10-03