The purpose of this study was to compare the validity of Cariogram (an algorithm-based software), the American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry's caries risk assessment form (CRAF), and Caries Management by Risk Assessment (CAMBRA) in predicting caries increment in a group of two- to four-year-olds with high caries prevalence over two years. Children ( equals 175) were examined at baseline, and caries was scored according to World Health Organization criteria. Diet and oral health habits were captured from questionnaires, and saliva variables were captured from chairside tests. Cariogram, CRAF, and CAMBRA risk categories were calculated with age-appropriate modifications. Caries increment was assessed after two years by counting the number of surfaces that changed from "sound" to "decayed." The predictive ability was assessed using Kendall's Tau, Poisson regression, and receiver operating characteristic analysis. Risk categories differed at baseline, with 93 percent (CRAF), 54 percent (Cariogram), and 36 percent (CAMBRA) placed in the high-risk group. A statistically significant association with the two-year caries increment was found for Cariogram (P=0.003) and CAMBRA (P=0.001) but not for CRAF (P=0.9). CAMBRA displayed better performance in distinguishing subjects between risk categories compared with the other tools. Cariogram and CAMBRA displayed a higher validity than the CRAF in predicting caries increment in this population over a two-year period, but the over all accuracy was limited. (Pediatr Dent 2019;41(5):391-6. E53-E55).

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

caries increment
16
risk assessment
12
risk categories
12
caries
10
caries risk
8
high caries
8
caries prevalence
8
predicting caries
8
cambra displayed
8
risk
6

Similar Publications

Importance: Caries is the most common chronic childhood disease, with substantial health disparities.

Objective: To test whether parent-targeted oral health text (OHT) messages outperform child wellness text (CWT) messages on pediatric caries increment and oral health behaviors among underserved children attending pediatric well-child visits.

Design, Setting, And Participants: The parallel randomized clinical trial, Interactive Parent-Targeted Text Messaging in Pediatric Clinics to Reduce Caries Among Urban Children (iSmile), included participants who were recruited during pediatric medical clinic visits at 4 sites in Boston, Massachusetts, that serve low-income and racially and ethnically diverse (herein, underserved) populations.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: To evaluate whether changes in starch intake (in terms of amount and food sources) were associated with increments in dental caries among adults.

Design: This is an 11-year longitudinal study (2000-2011) with duplicate assessments for all variables. A 128-item FFQ was used to estimate intake of starch (g/d) and six starch-rich food groups (potatoes, potato products, roots and tubers, pasta, wholegrains and legumes).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Dental caries is the world's most prevalent disease. Untreated caries can cause pain and negatively impact psychosocial health, functioning, and nutrition. It is important to identify cost-effective, easy-to-use agents, which can prevent or arrest caries.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Effect of enzymatic chemo-mechanical agents on adhesion of composite resin to dentin of permanent teeth: an in vitro study.

Eur Arch Paediatr Dent

November 2024

Institute of Integrated Clinical Practice, Faculty of Medicine, University of Coimbra, Coimbra, Portugal.

Purpose: To evaluate and compare the effect of two enzymatic chemo-mechanical caries removal agents with conventional caries removal using rotatory instruments on the adhesion of composite resin to dentin of permanent teeth.

Methods: The sample comprised 30 permanent molars with caries lesions extending to the dentin, randomly distributed into three groups (n = 10 each): 1-Caries removal with rotary instruments (control group); 2-Caries removal with Papacárie Duo (F&A Laboratório Farmacêutico, São Paulo, Brazil); 3-Caries removal with Brix 3000™ (Brix S.R.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objectives: The objectives were to: (i) assess the accuracy of dental data for adults obtained from the Swedish Quality Register on Caries and Periodontitis (SKaPa); (ii) explore whether Latent Class Analysis (LCA) can identify groups of people based on caries data; and (iii) characterise the dental, medical and behavioural characteristics of people in the LCA-derived classes.

Methods: Caries data from the SKaPa register were compared with clinical data collected by five experienced dentists in a nested subgroup of the Malmö Offspring Study (MOS), namely the Malmö Offspring Dental Study (MODS) (n = 724) for validation. Dental data from SKaPa were then used to classify 61 984 adult participants of the Västerbotten Intervention Programme (VIP) into five classes using LCA and DMFS-based quintile ranking, respectively.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!