Gallie Amanda
King's College London, London, UK.
Evid Based Dent. 2019 Dec;20(4):103-104. doi: 10.1038/s41432-019-0069-7.
Objectives The primary objective of this review was to determine the effectiveness of interdental cleaning per se as a stand-alone treatment, and then with the addition of tooth-brushing or a brushing device as a comparator. The ecological plaque model within which biofilm modification is key to stabilisation of periodontal inflammation. Thus, the control of plaque biofilms has a positive impact on reducing periodontal diseases and caries in the population. A secondary objective of the review was to carry out cross-sectional analysis of the effectiveness of different interdental cleaning aid groups (ICA) to ascertain which ICA emerged as the most effective in removing bacterial plaque.Study selection criteria Studies of a four-week duration or longer were included. Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) that compared tooth-brushing and a home-use interdental cleaning device versus tooth-brushing alone were selected.Data extraction and synthesis No exclusion criteria regarding date or language were given. Two of the authors independently screened the search results, selected relevant studies, extracted data, assessed the primary studies for sources of bias and graded and assessed the quality of the evidence.Results 35 RCTs (3929 randomised adult participants) were included in this review. The participants could not be blinded and therefore the level of performance bias was probably high. Only two of the RCT studies included could report low performance bias. The data was analysed and comparisons made between mean differences (MD)and standardised mean differences (SMDs). The interdental cleaning aids (ICAs) included in this systematic review were:1. Floss (15 trials)2. Interdental brushes (2 trials)3. Wooden sticks (2 trials)4. Rubber/elastomer sticks (2 trials)5. Oral irrigator (5 trials)The evidence collected was relatively weak in terms of robustness and the studies were all of a fairly short duration. Interestingly, none of the studies adequately described the periodontal health of the participants and the base line diagnosis for the periodontal condition of these patients was noticeably absent. Baseline levels of inflammation were, however, recorded, and in the majority of the studies, participants exhibited low levels of gingival inflammation. Periodontal disease and status were not assessed and recorded in any of the studies. Gingivitis was recorded at base line and after testing, using the Silness and Loe scoring system. A percentage bleeding score was available in some of the included studies. None of the trials elicited interproximal caries status. Plaque levels were recorded at base line and completion using the Quigley Hein index. Measures of caries activity and presence of interproximal caries were absent.Conclusions The question of whether interdental cleaning aids improve oral health cannot be answered by this systematic review. More work needs to be done to develop the tools to evidence whether caries and periodontal disease can be controlled by the use of interdental cleaning aids.But from the results of this study we can ascertain that interdental cleaning aids are augmented in their effectiveness by the addition of a toothbrush; conversely a toothbrush has less effect on reducing plaque and inflammation levels when used alone. A combination of the brushing and interdental cleaning improves oral health outcomes.The best performing interdental aid was the interdental brush (low certainty evidence), the use of which was associated with reduced inflammation and reduction in bleeding scores; statistically this gave slightly better results than other cleaning aids such as floss.Floss (low-certainty evidence) showed some indication of reducing gingivitis at 1 month. However, the bleeding site and plaque score information was difficult to interpret.An oral irrigator showed no real benefit over brushing alone at three months.Rubber/elastomer sticks reduced plaque scores but not gingivitis at one month (very low certainty evidence.) Safety: None of the studies included in the review tested compared the degree of gingival irritation caused by the ICAs.
目的 本综述的主要目的是确定牙间隙清洁本身作为一种独立治疗方法的有效性,然后将添加刷牙或刷牙装置作为对照进行研究。生态菌斑模型中,生物膜的改变是牙周炎症稳定的关键。因此,控制菌斑生物膜对减少人群中的牙周疾病和龋齿有积极影响。本综述的第二个目的是对不同牙间隙清洁辅助工具组(ICA)的有效性进行横断面分析,以确定哪种ICA在去除细菌菌斑方面最有效。
研究选择标准 纳入持续时间为四周或更长时间的研究。选择比较刷牙与家用牙间隙清洁装置和仅刷牙的随机对照试验(RCT)。
数据提取与综合 未给出关于日期或语言的排除标准。两位作者独立筛选检索结果,选择相关研究,提取数据,评估主要研究的偏倚来源,并对证据质量进行分级和评估。
结果 本综述纳入了35项RCT(3929名随机分组的成年参与者)。参与者无法设盲,因此表现偏倚水平可能较高。纳入的RCT研究中只有两项可以报告低表现偏倚。对数据进行了分析,并对平均差(MD)和标准化平均差(SMD)进行了比较。本系统综述中纳入的牙间隙清洁辅助工具(ICA)有:
牙线(15项试验)
牙间隙刷(2项试验)
木棍(2项试验)
橡胶/弹性体棒(2项试验)
口腔冲洗器(5项试验)
收集到的证据在稳健性方面相对较弱,且研究持续时间都较短。有趣的是,没有一项研究充分描述参与者的牙周健康状况,这些患者牙周状况的基线诊断明显缺失。然而,记录了炎症的基线水平,并且在大多数研究中,参与者表现出低水平的牙龈炎症。在任何研究中都未评估和记录牙周疾病及状况。使用Silness和Loe评分系统在基线和测试后记录牙龈炎情况。在一些纳入研究中可获得出血百分比评分。没有一项试验得出邻面龋状况。使用Quigley Hein指数在基线和完成时记录菌斑水平。未测量龋活性和邻面龋的存在情况。
结论 本系统综述无法回答牙间隙清洁辅助工具是否能改善口腔健康这一问题。需要开展更多工作来开发工具,以证明使用牙间隙清洁辅助工具是否能控制龋齿和牙周疾病。
但从本研究结果可以确定,添加牙刷可增强牙间隙清洁辅助工具的有效性;相反,单独使用牙刷对减少菌斑和炎症水平的效果较差。刷牙和牙间隙清洁相结合可改善口腔健康结果。
表现最佳的牙间隙清洁辅助工具为牙间隙刷(低确定性证据),使用牙间隙刷与炎症减轻和出血评分降低相关;在统计学上,这比牙线等其他清洁辅助工具的效果略好。
牙线(低确定性证据)在1个月时显示出一些减轻牙龈炎的迹象。然而,出血部位和菌斑评分信息难以解读。
在3个月时,口腔冲洗器与仅刷牙相比没有实际益处。
橡胶/弹性体棒在1个月时降低了菌斑评分,但未减轻牙龈炎(极低确定性证据)。
本综述纳入的研究中没有一项测试比较了ICA引起的牙龈刺激程度。