TY - JOUR
T1 - A network meta-analysis of interproximal oral hygiene methods in the reduction of clinical indices of inflammation
AU - Kotsakis, Georgios A.
AU - Lian, Qinshu
AU - Ioannou, Andreas L.
AU - Michalowicz, Bryan S.
AU - John, Mike T.
AU - Chu, Haitao
N1 - Funding Information:
Drs. Chu, John & Kotsakis were supported by NIDCR grant R03 DE024750. Dr. Kotsakis has received an unrestricted research grant by Waterpik Inc. in the past. Thanks to Xiwen (Cece) Liao, Clinical Periodontal Research Laboratory, University of Washington, Seattle, WA for her assistance in preparing the tables for this manuscript. Drs. Lian, Ioannou, Michalowicz, John, and Chu report no potential conflicts of interest.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 American Academy of Periodontology
PY - 2018/5
Y1 - 2018/5
N2 - Background: A wide selection of Interdental Oral Hygiene (IOH) aids is available to consumers. Recommendations for selection are, however, limited by the lack of direct comparisons in available studies. We aimed to assess the comparative efficacy of IOH aids using Bayesian Network Meta-Analysis (BNMA). Methods: Two independent reviewers performed a systematic literature review of randomized clinical trials assessing IOH aids, based on a focused question. Gingival inflammation (Gingival Index (GI), Bleeding-on-probing (BOP)) was the primary outcome and plaque and probing depth were secondary outcomes A random-effects arm-based BNMA model was run for each outcome; posterior medians and 95% credible-intervals (CIs) summarized marginal distributions of parameters. Results: A two-phase selection process identified 22 trials assessing 10 IOH aids as brushing adjuncts. Interdental brushes (IB) yielded the largest reduction in GI (0.23 [95% CI: 0.09, 0.37]) as toothbrushing adjuncts, followed by water-jet (WJ) (0.19 [95% CI: 0.14, 0.24]). Rankings based on posterior probabilities revealed that IB and WJ had the highest probability of being “best” (64.7% and 27.4%, respectively) for GI reduction, whereas the probability for toothpick and floss being the “best” IOH aids was near zero. Notably, except for toothpicks, all IOH aids were better at reducing GI as compared with control. Conclusions: BNMA enabled us to quantitatively evaluate IOH aids and provide a global ranking of their efficacy. Interdental brushes and water-jets ranked high for reducing gingival bleeding, whereas toothpicks and floss ranked last. The patient-perceived benefit of IOH aids is not clear because gingival inflammation measures are physical indicators of periodontal health.
AB - Background: A wide selection of Interdental Oral Hygiene (IOH) aids is available to consumers. Recommendations for selection are, however, limited by the lack of direct comparisons in available studies. We aimed to assess the comparative efficacy of IOH aids using Bayesian Network Meta-Analysis (BNMA). Methods: Two independent reviewers performed a systematic literature review of randomized clinical trials assessing IOH aids, based on a focused question. Gingival inflammation (Gingival Index (GI), Bleeding-on-probing (BOP)) was the primary outcome and plaque and probing depth were secondary outcomes A random-effects arm-based BNMA model was run for each outcome; posterior medians and 95% credible-intervals (CIs) summarized marginal distributions of parameters. Results: A two-phase selection process identified 22 trials assessing 10 IOH aids as brushing adjuncts. Interdental brushes (IB) yielded the largest reduction in GI (0.23 [95% CI: 0.09, 0.37]) as toothbrushing adjuncts, followed by water-jet (WJ) (0.19 [95% CI: 0.14, 0.24]). Rankings based on posterior probabilities revealed that IB and WJ had the highest probability of being “best” (64.7% and 27.4%, respectively) for GI reduction, whereas the probability for toothpick and floss being the “best” IOH aids was near zero. Notably, except for toothpicks, all IOH aids were better at reducing GI as compared with control. Conclusions: BNMA enabled us to quantitatively evaluate IOH aids and provide a global ranking of their efficacy. Interdental brushes and water-jets ranked high for reducing gingival bleeding, whereas toothpicks and floss ranked last. The patient-perceived benefit of IOH aids is not clear because gingival inflammation measures are physical indicators of periodontal health.
KW - dental hygiene
KW - gingivitis
KW - meta-analysis
KW - oral hygiene
KW - systematic reviews and evidence-based medicine
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U2 - 10.1002/JPER.17-0368
DO - 10.1002/JPER.17-0368
M3 - Review article
C2 - 29520910
AN - SCOPUS:85049228065
SN - 0022-3492
VL - 89
SP - 558
EP - 570
JO - Journal of Periodontology
JF - Journal of Periodontology
IS - 5
ER -