Why is implant survival a problem?

Raining on the implant parade

SFFf-1989091.0B 008

Just out of interest, I did a cross-sectional survey of the implants presenting in my surgery over the past ten days. This is just a snapshot of what happens in general practice. All the implants have been in place for five years or more,  median patient age 60 years. Over two-thirds of the implants in this snapshot were placed at other practices, so this is not a self-audit:

RESULTS

Implants with bone loss and chronic infection     58%      (95% CI; 39% to 77%)

Failed implant (mechanical)                                          4%      (95% CI; 0% to 12%)

Patients aware of a problem                                           8%      (95% CI; 0% to 19%)

Discussion

There is a grumbling problem in implantology and that is of expectation both for the dentist and the patient. Implants don’t last forever and can require a lot of expensive aftercare. Even as far back as 2008 papers were being written on the chronic infections around implants (Zitzmann & Berglundh 2008) ranging from 1% to 47%. The chart below shows the dramatic increase in publications about implant infection (peri-implantitis).

implantitis
Data extracted from Scopus citation and abstract database (periimplantitis)

The implant companies still continue to market their products based on survival and patient satisfaction data, not clinical success. On industry-sponsored patient information websites, one can read statements like ‘acts like a natural [tooth], no special care or patients are 98% are happy or very happy. Some of the cost-effectiveness data published is of very poor quality making claims the data cannot robustly support.

Survival is how long the implant remains in the mouth, not whether it is functional, aesthetic or infection free (Papaspyridakos et al. 2012; Misch et al. 2008). What patients really need to know is the success data (complication free) so they can make a fully informed choice about the repair and maintenance requirements over the long term. The conclusion of a recent systematic review on implant infection concluded more consideration should be placed on the peri-implant maintenance therapy practicalities prior to placement and restoration  (Monje et al. 2016).

To conclude, implants are a very good replacement for missing teeth, with high success rates but they are not strictly better than other more established treatments (Abt et al. 2012). Contrary to the marketing literature, they do not behave like real teeth, do need special care and definitely don’t last forever. An increasing number of patients are having problems with their implants that they will be totally unaware of it until it’s too late.

So ask yourself these three questions before having an implant

  • Do you really NEED to replace the missing/damaged tooth?
  • What are the OTHER OPTIONS for replacing these teeth or filling the gap?
  • Have you budgeted for the MAINTAI ?gNENCE, REPAIR OF REPLACEMENT COSTS?

 

 

References

Abt, E., Carr, A.B. & Worthington, H. V, 2012. Interventions for replacing missing teeth: partially absent dentition. The Cochrane database of systematic reviews, 2(2), pp.1–54.

Misch, C.E. et al., 2008. Implant success, survival, and failure: the International Congress of Oral Implantologists (ICOI) Pisa Consensus Conference. Implant dentistry, 17(1), pp.5–15.

Monje, A. et al., 2016. Impact of Maintenance Therapy for the Prevention of Peri-implant Diseases: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis. Journal of Dental Research, 95(4), pp.372–379.

Papaspyridakos, P. et al., 2012. Success Criteria in Implant Dentistry: A Systematic Review. Journal of Dental Research, 91(3), pp.242–248.

Zitzmann, N.U. & Berglundh, T., 2008. Definition and prevalence of peri-implant diseases. Journal of Clinical Periodontology, 35(SUPPL. 8), pp.286–291.

First Blog the National Elf Service

I have just had my first clinical appraisal posted on the National Elf Service Blog.

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A nice conclusion to a week at Oxford on the Introduction to Study Design & Research Methods course which is part of my MSc.

The appraisal is of a systematic review titled: Efficacy of Mandibular 2-implant Overdenture: An Updated Meta-analysis on Patient-based Outcomes

EBM Manifesto 2.0

What is good for Evidence-Based Medicine is also good for Evidence-Based Dentistry. Siblings separated by the vagaries of history and politics.test-004

Prof Carl Henehgan gave an inspiring but also worrying presentation titled “Resuscitating poor quality research”.  One conclusion of the presentation was that throwing more money at healthcare will not solve the problems we are facing at present. The two areas that come up most in UK conversations are general practice, be that medical or dental and A+E. These are both ‘wicked’ environments and I would recommend all policy makers to read Rittel & Webber 1973 paper. A ‘wicked’ environment is unstable and ever changing, full of unique problems and solutions. Over the year’s policy makers have increasingly tried to tame these environments which by their very nature morph into a new set of problems.

In my practice, we are increasingly distracted from our patients/staff care by new layers of policy that bare no relation to the practice we work in. The two things that I would recommend are firstly that we accept what these environments are, and will always be, impossible to fully tame. Secondly we don’t need to waste large amounts of time and resource creating universal detailed policies  to deal with every possible adverse event. By the time one problem is ‘solved’ it is already redundant and has been overtaken by a new problem.

Practice is like a dance, at its best we are in constant state of flow, dealing with the ever-changing situation. This is based on deep knowledge, experience, care and compassion, not tick-boxes. We need the autonomy and trust of the policy-makers to balance the care of the individual with the care of the population. Trying to centrally ‘manage’ every aspect with a policy document or guideline creates an adversarial battle ground increasingly resistant to change or improvement.

Webber, M.M. & Rittle, H., 1973. Dilemmas in a General Theory of Planning *. Policy Sciences, 4 (December 1969), pp.155–169.