Implications of caries diagnostic strategies for clinical management decisions
Baelum, V., Hintze, H., Wenzel, A., Danielsen, B. and Nyvad, B. (2011),
Implications of caries diagnostic strategies for clinical management
decisions. Community Dentistry and Oral Epidemiology.
doi: 10.1111/j.1600-0528.2011.00655.x
Abstract – Objectives: In clinical
practice, a visual–tactile caries examination is frequently supplemented
by bitewing radiography. This study evaluated strategies for combining
visual–tactile and radiographic caries detection methods and determined
their implications for clinical management decisions in a low-caries
population.
Methods: Each of four
examiners independently examined preselected contacting interproximal
surfaces in 53 dental students aged 20–37 years using a visual–tactile
examination and bitewing radiography. The visual–tactile examination
distinguished between noncavitated and cavitated lesions while the
radiographic examination determined lesion depth. Direct inspection of
the surfaces following tooth separation for the presence of cavitated or
noncavitated lesions was the validation method. The true-positive rate
(i.e. the sensitivity) and the false-positive rate (i.e. 1-specificity)
were calculated for each diagnostic strategy.
Results:
Visual–tactile examination provided a true-positive rate of 34.2% and a
false-positive rate of 1.5% for the detection of a cavity. The
combination of a visual–tactile and a radiographic examination using the
lesion in dentin threshold for assuming cavitation had a true-positive
rate of 76.3% and a false-positive rate of 8.2%. When diagnostic
observations were translated into clinical management decisions using
the rule that a noncavitated lesion should be treated nonoperatively and
a cavitated lesion operatively, our results showed that the
visual–tactile method alone was the superior strategy, resulting in most
correct clinical management decisions and most correct decisions
regarding the choice of treatment.
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