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Not Yet RecruitingNCT06378502

The Effect of Different Antibiotic Protocols on Peri-implant Tissue Health

The Effect of Different Antibiotic Protocols for Dental Implant Surgery on Peri-implant Tissue Health and on Oral Microbiome and Resistome

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
80 (estimated)
Sponsor
Universita degli Studi di Genova · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
35 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The aim of the present project (non-inferiority trial) is to evaluate the effect of different antibiotic strategies (long-span vs. short-span) for implant surgery on peri-implant tissue health, oral microbiome (included resistome) and salivary MiRNomics in healthy patients.

Detailed description

A total of 80 patients will be included and randomly divided in two groups: 1. Long-span prescription: 1 g Amoxicillin every 8 h starting 1 day before surgery and for 5 days after surgery 2. Short-span prescription: 2 g Amoxicillin 1 h before surgery Before surgery, patients will undergo an antibiotic sensitivity test (AST), and non-invasive samples will be taken to analyse oral microbiome including resistome. Saliva samples will be also taken for miRNomics analysis. Patients will be rehabilitated with single implants or partial implant-supported fixed prostheses. The day of surgery, samples of peripheral blood will be taken and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) isolated from the first 30 patients in order to implement a micro-fluidic bioreactor replicating the bone healing process of each patient. 3D bone models will be developed that are suitable for drug screening. At 2 and 6 months post-treatment, AST test and oral microbiome and resistome analysis will be performed again. 2 months after treatment, a new saliva sample of the patients will be also taken, analysed and compared using MiRnomics technology with the preoperative one with the further aim of identifying reliable biomarkers of mucositis and perimplantitis. During the 12-month follow-up implant survival rate, marginal bone loss (MBL), biologic and technical complication rate and peri-implant health parameters (including plaque index, probing depth and bleeding on probing) will be evaluated. Parametric or non-parametric comparative tests, as appropriate, will be performed to detect differences between the groups in the various outcome variables. The effect of patient-related and implant-related predictive factors on the various outcomes will be evaluated using multilevel logistic regression analysis. Metadata will be analyzed also with 4th generation Artificial Neural Networks (ANNs) (machine learning) using unsupervised and supervised systems. Expected results: The present project is expected to clarify if the short-span antibiotic therapy is not inferior to the long-span one in healthy patients undergoing implant surgery. The outcomes will contribute to the development of effective clinical guidelines that will help to tackle the issue of antimicrobial resistance. In addition, the development and validation of a 3D bone model to be used for drug screening is expected, that might overcome limitations of currently available 2D bone models and animal studies. A further expected result is the identification of biomarkers for diagnosis and prognosis in implant dentistry, through salivary miRNomics that might lead to the development of a non-invasive liquid biopsy.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGAmoxicillin ShortShort Span
DRUGAmoxicillin LongLong span

Timeline

Start date
2024-05-03
Primary completion
2025-12-30
Completion
2026-06-30
First posted
2024-04-22
Last updated
2024-04-22

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06378502. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.