Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03889535

Anterior Zirconia vs. Resin Strip Crowns

A Comparison of Anterior Pediatric Zirconia Crowns and Bonded Composite Resin Strip Crowns: A One-year Feasibility Study

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
59 (actual)
Sponsor
The Hospital for Sick Children · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Months – 48 Months
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This study is comparing the effectiveness of two different dental crown fillings (resin crowns and zirconia crowns) for primary front teeth (incisors). Both dental crown fillings are currently used by community pediatric dentists. Resin crowns are currently the standard treatment for primary incisors at The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids). Zirconia crowns are not presently used at SickKids. It is unknown if one type of crown is better than the other type. If the zirconia crowns produce similar or better results in fixing the primary front teeth, then the zirconia crowns may become the new standard of care at SickKids.

Detailed description

To assess the clinical outcome of pediatric zirconia crowns and to provide evidence-based treatment, a prospective, well controlled study would be beneficial. Due to a lack of existing outcome data for bonded resin strip crowns and zirconia crowns, a feasibility study is indicated to establish the basis for randomized controlled trial design. The goal of this feasibility study is to compare the clinical outcomes of the zirconia crowns and bonded composite resin strip crowns in primary maxillary incisors. Therefore the aims of the research study is as follows: 1. To statistically compare the one-year survival of resin composite strip crowns and zirconia crowns in primary maxillary incisors. 2. To statistically compare the frequency of pulp therapy required for placement of zirconia crowns and resin composite strip crowns in primary maxillary incisors. 3. To measure the frequency at which teeth randomized to zirconia crowns are deemed restorable with strip crowns and not zirconia crowns, and vice versa. After induction of general anesthesia, following the confirmation that incisor(s) can be restored by the treating dentist, each study participant will be randomly allocated to either the strip crown or the zirconia crown group. The assignment will be done using a computer-generated simple random number sequence with a one to one allocation ratio. The treatment will be consistent for each patient for all eligible teeth, although the experimental unit is the incisor. Each research participant will be reassessed clinically at 6 and 12 months after treatment. Follow-up appointments will be scheduled by the Department of Dentistry at the Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids). Clinical reassessment will be conducted by one investigator. Intra-oral photographs will be acquired at 6 months and at 12 months. All photographs will be taken by the same investigator, using a standardized imaging format. Two photographs per patient will be acquired: one extra-oral photograph, limited to the maxillary right cuspid (tooth 53) to left cuspid (tooth 63); and one extra-oral maxillary occlusal photograph, limited to the maxillary right cuspid (tooth 53) to left cuspid (tooth 63). Photographs will be taken with a Canon Rebel XSi and a Canon ring flash Macro Ring Lite MR-14EX II. Parents will also take 2 photographs of their child's teeth using their own camera or phone. They will be provided with an example of how to take those photographs. They will send the photographs to the investigators via a secured SickKids e-mail. Only the research investigators and the research coordinator will have access to the secured e-mail. Pictures sent by the parents will be stored on a the photograph and X-ray database at SickKids. A reminder to take the pictures at 6 and 12 months after the surgery will be sent using the secured e-mail. Photographs taken by the parents will be used for the photographic assessment if clinical photographs are unsuccessful at the follow-ups and if they are of sufficient quality for assessment based on the investigators' judgment.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEResin strip crownsTechnique: I.Select shade of resin-based composite II.Rubber dam isolation III.Select primary incisor celluloid crown form with mesiodistal width similar to the tooth to be restored and trim the selected crown form to fit. IV.Remove decay with slow speed round bur. Perform pulp therapy, if indicated. V.Reduce incisal edge by 1.5 mm VI.Reduce interproximal surfaces by 0.5 to 1.0 mm with feather edge at gingival margin. The interproximal walls should be approximately parallel. VII.Reduce buccal surface by 1.0 mm and lingual surface by 0.5 mm with feather edge at gingival margins. VIII. Round line angles IX.Etch for 15 to 20 seconds, rinse and air dry X. Apply bond and polymerise XI. Fill crown form to 2/3 full with composite resin and seat onto the tooth. Remove excess material with hand instrument. Polymerise. XII. Remove celluloid crown form with scaler XIII. Finish and polish
DEVICEZirconia crownsI.Choose appropriately sized crown based on tooth's dimension; evaluate occlusion. II.Rubber dam isolation. III.Remove decay, perform pulp therapy if indicated. IV.Prep mesial half of incisal edge to complete thickness of 001 donut bur. V.Prep and blend distal half of incisal edge to create uniform incisal reduction. VI. Create chamfer margin at gum line at least half the thickness of bur tip. VII. Taper incisal half lingually to create a thin incisal edge. VIII. Remove cingulum and 0.75-1.25mm of lingual enamel; blend together forming smooth, slightly concave surface extending to tissue. IX. Thin incisal half. X.With 004 flame bur, remove chamfer margin at tissue level. Keep bur parallel to long axis of tooth. Remove chamfer in incremental steps, XI. Extend tip of bur full 2mm subgingivally. While hugging bur axially along root surface, make 3 circumferential passes. XII.Clean tooth and control bleeding. XIII.Cement crown with pure glass ionomer cement

Timeline

Start date
2019-04-11
Primary completion
2022-05-01
Completion
2022-05-01
First posted
2019-03-26
Last updated
2022-05-05

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Canada

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03889535. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.