Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04036890

Local Minocycline in Patients Under Supportive Periodontal Therapy

Effects of Local Minocycline Adjunctive Application in Comparison to Instrumentation Alone, in Patients With Residual Pockets Under Supportive Periodontal Therapy: a Double-blinded Randomized Controlled Clinical Trial

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
68 (actual)
Sponsor
National Dental Centre, Singapore · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
21 Years – 90 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The aims of the present study are to assess the significance of the adjunctive effect of the subgingival application of a 2% minocycline hydrochloride controlled-delivery system (MHS) in comparison to subgingival instrumentation with application of a placebo gel, 3 months after therapy in subjects with recurrent periodontitis undergoing supportive periodontal therapy (SPT) and to assess the substantivity of the gel attributable to the adjunctive delivery of the medication that is detected at 3 months during a 9-month period of regular SPT. Recurrent periodontitis will be defined as sites with residual periodontal probing depths and bleeding on probing after completion of initial periodontal therapy. This will include both persistent and recurrent periodontitis, where persistent means the residual periodontal site after initial periodontal therapy, and recurrent means the site which was improved by initial periodontal therapy, but disease recurred.

Detailed description

It has been reported that regular maintenance of subjects with treated periodontal disease is the key consideration in the long-term periodontal prognosis of these subjects. Periodic prophylaxis may prevent loss of clinical attachment over long periods of time even in patients with less than optimal plaque control. However, there are limitations in routine subgingival re-instrumentation especially in bleeding pockets, as only 50% of these sites improve. Furthermore, the persistence of bleeding pockets increases the risk of disease progression and tooth loss. Thus there is a need for adjuncts that may improve the outcome especially in subjects with recurrent periodontitis during SPT. Some studies reported significantly better results with subgingival administration of local minocycline in residual pockets post initial periodontal therapy over a short period of time. There are few studies assessing the efficacy of topical minocycline gel in subjects with recurrent periodontitis while in SPT, and the long term effect. The present study will examine the significance of the adjunctive effect of the subgingival application of a 2% minocycline hydrochloride controlled-delivery system (MHS) in comparison to subgingival instrumentation with application of a placebo gel, 3 months after therapy in subjects with recurrent periodontitis undergoing supportive periodontal therapy (SPT) and to assess the substantivity of the gel attributable to the adjunctive delivery of the medication that will be detected at 3 months during a 9-month period of regular SPT.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUG2% minocycline hydrochloride controlled-delivery system (MHS)The test product is a highly viscous gel for local subgingival placement composing of an ointment containing micro-capsule type particles for sustained release and the active ingredient 2% minocycline gel (10mg in each syringe of 0.5g) (Periocline, SUNSTAR, Osaka, Japan). The other ingredients include magnesium chloride, hydroxyl-ethylcellulose, aminoalkylmethacrylaye copolymer, triacetin and concentrated glycerine, giving the preparation a sustained-released property. It will be applied to experimental teeth and the adjacent teeth by gently inserting the tip of a specially designed applicator until the paste flows over the gingival margin.
DRUGPlacebosIt is the same gel as MHS but without active ingredient minocycline hydrochloride.

Timeline

Start date
2016-06-03
Primary completion
2019-10-18
Completion
2019-10-18
First posted
2019-07-30
Last updated
2019-12-02

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04036890. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.