Effect of flowable composites on the clinical performance of non-carious cervical lesions: A systematic review and meta-analysis
Journal of Dentistry
Volume 65, October 2017, Pages 11-21
Review article
Objectives
To answer the following PICO question (participant, intervention, comparator and outcome): Does flowable resin composite restorations
compared with regular resin composites improve the marginal adaptation,
marginal discoloration and retention rates of restorations placed in
non-carious cervical lesions [NCCLs] of adults?, through a systematic review and meta-analysis.
Source
MEDLINE,
Scopus, Web of Science, LILACS, BBO, Cochrane Library and SIGLE were
searched without restrictions, as well as the abstracts of the IADR,
clinical trials registries, dissertations and theses in May 2016
(updated in April 2017).
Study selection
We
included randomized clinical trials (RCTs) that answered the PICO
question. RCTs were excluded if cavities other than NCCLs were treated; indirect restorations; polyacid-based resins instead of composite resins were employed, restorations in primary teeth
and restorations were placed in carious cervical lesions. The risk of
bias tool of the Cochrane Collaboration was applied in the eligible
studies and the GRADE tool was used to assess the quality of the
evidence.
Data
After
duplicates removal, 5137 articles were identified. After abstract and
title screening, 8 studies remained. Six were at “unclear” risk of bias.
The study follow-ups ranged from 1 to 3 years. No significant
difference was observed between groups for loss of retention and
marginal discoloration in all follow-ups. Better marginal adaptation was
observed for restorations performed with flowable composites. At 1-year
(risk ratio = 0.27 [0.10 to 0.70]) and 3-year (risk ratio = 0.34 [0.17
to 0.71]) follow-ups, flowable composites showed a risk 73% and 66%
lower than regular composites for lack of adaptation, respectively. The
evidence was graded as moderate quality for loss or retention at 3 years
due to risk of bias and low and very low for all other outcomes due to
risk of bias, imprecision and inconsistency.
Conclusions
We
have moderate confidence that the resin composite viscosity does not
influence the retention rates at 3 years. Similar marginal discoloration
and better marginal adaptation was observed for flowable composites but
the quality of evidence is doubtful. (PROSPERO CRD42015019560).
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