Cheng Yanfei, Lai Zhifen, Yu Weiguang
Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Guangzhou, China.
Department of Radiology, The First Affiliated Hospital, Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou, China.
Front Dent Med. 2025 Apr 29;6:1563641. doi: 10.3389/fdmed.2025.1563641. eCollection 2025.
This retrospective cohort study aimed to compare survival rates between immediate (≤24 h post-extraction) and delayed (3-4 months post-extraction) dental implants and to identify patient- and site-specific risk factors for implant failure, with emphasis on anatomical site, sex, and osteoporosis.
We analyzed 1,500 implants (300 immediate, 1,200 delayed) from patients treated at the Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine (2005-2023). Kaplan-Meier analysis evaluated cumulative survival rates over 72 months, with Cox regression modeling to assess predictors of failure. Propensity score matching (PSM) addressed baseline covariate imbalances.
Delayed implants exhibited significantly higher survival rates than immediate implants at 72 months (81.1% vs. 53.2%, < 0.0001). Survival divergence intensified after 24 months, with delayed implants retaining 979 patients at risk vs. 202 for immediate implants. Mandibular sites consistently outperformed maxillary sites in both strategies (delayed: 88.5% vs. 72.2%; immediate: 70.5% vs. 40.7%, < 0.0001). Male sex (HR: 1.64, 95% CI: 1.28-1.88; < 0.001) and osteoporosis (HR: 2.50, 95% CI: 1.17-4.52; = 0.024) emerged as independent risk factors, while tobacco use, diabetes, and hypertension showed no significant associations. PSM resolved most baseline imbalances, with post-matching standardized mean differences (SMD) <0.1 for key covariates.
Delayed implantation at 3-4 months post-extraction provides superior intermediate-term survival, particularly in mandibular sites. Male patients and individuals with osteoporosis face elevated failure risks, warranting tailored clinical protocols. While both strategies remain viable, delayed placement is recommended for high-risk populations to optimize long-term outcomes.
本回顾性队列研究旨在比较即刻(拔牙后≤24小时)和延迟(拔牙后3 - 4个月)牙种植体的生存率,并确定种植体失败的患者和部位特异性风险因素,重点关注解剖部位、性别和骨质疏松症。
我们分析了广东省中医院(2005 - 2023年)治疗患者的1500颗种植体(300颗即刻种植体,1200颗延迟种植体)。Kaplan - Meier分析评估了72个月内的累积生存率,Cox回归模型用于评估失败的预测因素。倾向得分匹配(PSM)解决了基线协变量不平衡问题。
在72个月时,延迟种植体的生存率显著高于即刻种植体(81.1%对53.2%,<0.0001)。24个月后生存差异加剧,延迟种植体有979例处于风险中,而即刻种植体为202例。在两种策略中,下颌部位的表现始终优于上颌部位(延迟种植:88.5%对72.2%;即刻种植:70.5%对40.7%,<0.0001)。男性(HR:1.64,95%CI:1.28 - 1.88;<0.001)和骨质疏松症(HR:2.50,95%CI:1.17 - 4.52;=0.024)成为独立风险因素,而吸烟、糖尿病和高血压未显示出显著关联。PSM解决了大多数基线不平衡问题,匹配后关键协变量的标准化均值差异(SMD)<0.1。
拔牙后3 - 4个月进行延迟种植可提供更好的中期生存率,尤其是在下颌部位。男性患者和骨质疏松症患者面临更高的失败风险,需要制定针对性的临床方案。虽然两种策略都可行,但对于高危人群建议采用延迟种植以优化长期效果。