AI Article Synopsis

  • Tooth wear is a complex issue that leads to the loss of dental tissue, and the study aimed to evaluate the reliability of the tooth wear evaluation system (TWES) 2.0 when used by dental students as opposed to experienced professionals.
  • The study involved 47 dental students assessing 14 patient cases, and the analysis revealed variable agreement levels among the students, with some areas showing higher reliability than others.
  • The findings suggest that the students struggled more with assessing restorations than natural teeth, especially in specific areas, indicating a need for better training and clearer definitions of tooth wear levels to improve assessment accuracy in future research.

Article Abstract

Background: Tooth wear is a multifactorial process resulting in the loss of dental hard tissues. For its assessment, the tooth wear evaluation system (TWES) 2.0 has been published. Previous studies on the TWES involved well-trained practitioners, rather than nonexperts.

Objective: The first aim of this study was to investigate the reliability of the assessment of tooth wear severity on dental hard tissues, using the TWES 2.0, by nonexperts. The second aim was to investigate the reliability of assessment of wear severity on dental restorations, using a third scale.

Methods: Forty-seven dental students evaluated at least 9 of 14 possible patient cases on dental casts and intraoral photographs. Cohen's kappa (agreement with sample solution) and Fleiss' kappa (Inter-rater reliability) were calculated.

Results: The agreements of the operators' ratings compared to the sample-solution resulted in Cohen's kappa between 0.02 and 0.9. The agreements were 0.34 for occlusal; 0.43 for vestibular; 0.57 for oral surfaces. Inter-rater reliability (Fleiss' kappa) was 0.35 for occlusal, 0.17 for vestibular and 0.24 for oral assessment. The inter-rater reliability of the ratings on tooth surfaces with restorations was lower with 0.21 (occlusal), 0.14 (vestibular) and 0.39 (oral). The agreement on different restorations differed tremendously.

Conclusions: The ability to correctly assess the cases varied considerably between individual examiners. Within the limits of this study, assessment of restorations was slightly more challenging compared to natural teeth, particularly in occlusal regions or when the restorative material is gold. Subsequent studies should address whether enhanced training and improved definition of tooth wear grades result in higher reliability scores.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/joor.13856DOI Listing

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