Purpose: This study aimed to determine if implant-supported overdentures are a long-term economically efficacious therapy for edentulous patients when compared to fixed osseointegrated prostheses.
Materials And Methods: Clinical records of 25 patients from two long-term studies (fixed and overdenture) were included in this analysis. A cost minimization analysis from the patient perspective was employed. Direct clinical and time costs incurred over the 9-year period were deflated to 1995 Canadian dollars using the Consumer Price Index. National salary rates by occupation and gender were used to value patients' time, and a sensitivity analysis was carried out to assess the robustness of the results when an equal mean salary rate across treatment groups was assumed.
Results: The mean total, clinical, and time costs were significantly higher (Ps .05) for the fixed restoration group (dollars CAD10,748, dollars CAD10,094, and dollars CAD654, respectively) when compared to the overdenture group (dollars CAD3,665, dollars CAD3,343, and dollars CAD322, respectively). The initial, maintenance, and clinical visit costs were also significantly higher (P < or = .05) in the fixed restoration group (dollars CAD7,567, dollars CAD2,527, dollars CAD542, respectively) than in the overdenture group (dollars CAD2,505, dollars CAD830, dollars CAD292, respectively). The sensitivity analysis demonstrated that the time cost for the fixed prosthodontic group (dollars CAD488 vs dollars CAD322) was still significantly higher (P = .002), even after an equal mean salary rate was assumed.
Conclusion: Overdenture therapy for edentulous patients is a more cost-effective treatment compared to fixed prosthodontic treatment.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!