Longevity of Direct Restorations in Stress-Bearing Posterior Cavities: A Retrospective Study

Author:

Rho Y-J1,Namgung C2,Jin B-H3,Lim B-S4,Cho B-H5

Affiliation:

1. Young-Jee Rho, DDS, MDS, resident, Department of Conservative Dentistry, Seoul National University School of Dentistry, Seoul, Korea

2. Cheol Namgung, BS, student, Department of Dentistry, Seoul National University School of Dentistry, Seoul, Korea

3. Bo-Hyoung Jin, DDS, PhD, associate professor, Department of Preventive and Public Health Dentistry, Seoul National University School of Dentistry and Dental Research Institute, Seoul, Korea

4. Bum-Soon Lim, PhD, professor, Department of Dental Biomaterials Science, Seoul National University School of Dentistry and Dental Research Institute, Seoul, Korea

5. Byeong-Hoon Cho, DDS, PhD, professor, Department of Conservative Dentistry, Seoul National University School of Dentistry and Dental Research Institute, Seoul, Korea

Abstract

SUMMARYThe aims of this retrospective clinical study were to compare the longevities of direct posterior amalgam restorations (AMs) and resin composite restorations (RCs) that were subjected to occlusal stresses and to investigate variables predictive of their outcome. A total of 269 AMs and RCs filled in Class I and II cavities of posterior teeth were evaluated with Kaplan-Meier survival estimator and multivariate Cox proportional hazard model. Seventy-one retreated restorations were reviewed from dental records. The other 198 restorations still in use were evaluated according to modified US Public Health Service (USPHS) criteria by two investigators. The longevity of RCs was significantly lower than that of AMs (AM = 8.7 years and RC = 5.0 years, p<0.05), especially in molars. The prognostic variables, such as age, restorative material, tooth type, operator group, diagnosis, cavity classification, and gender, affected the longevity of the restorations (multivariate Cox regression analysis, p<0.05). However, among the restorations working in oral cavities, their clinical performance evaluated with modified USPHS criteria showed no statistical difference between both restoratives. In contrast to the short longevity of RCs relative to AMs, the clinical performance of RCs working in oral cavities was observed to be not different from that of AMs. This suggests that once a RC starts to fail, it happens in a rapid progression. As posterior esthetic restorations, RCs must be observed carefully with periodic follow-ups for early detection and timely repair of failures.

Publisher

Operative Dentistry

Subject

General Dentistry

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