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KMID : 1044820230530040306
Journal of Periodontal & Implant Science
2023 Volume.53 No. 4 p.306 ~ p.317
Evaluation of the clinical and radiographic effectiveness of treating peri-implant bone defects with a new biphasic calcium phosphate bone graft: a prospective, multicenter randomized controlled trial
Lee Jae-Hong

An Hyun-Wook
Im Jae-Seung
Kim Woo-Joo
Lee Dong-Won
Yun Jeong-Ho
Abstract
Purpose: Biphasic calcium phosphate (BCP), a widely used biomaterial for bone regeneration, contains synthetic hydroxyapatite (HA) and ¥â-tricalcium phosphate (¥â-TCP), the ratio of which can be adjusted to modulate the rate of degradation. The aim of this study was to evaluate the clinical and radiographic benefits of reconstructing peri-implant bone defects with a newly developed BCP consisting of 60% ¥â-TCP and 40% HA compared to demineralized bovine bone mineral (DBBM).

Methods: This prospective, multicenter, parallel, single-blind randomized controlled trial was conducted at the periodontology departments of 3 different dental hospitals. Changes in clinical (defect width and height) and radiographic (augmented horizontal bone thickness) parameters were measured between implant surgery with guided bone regeneration (GBR) and re-entry surgery. Postoperative discomfort (severity and duration of pain and swelling) and early soft-tissue wound healing (dehiscence and inflammation) were also assessed. Data were compared between the BCP (test) and DBBM (control) groups using the independent t-test and the ¥ö2 test.

Results: Of the 53 cases included, 27 were in the test group and 26 were in the control group.
After a healing period of 18 weeks, the full and mean resolution of buccal dehiscence defects were 59.3% (n=16) and 71.3% in the test group and 42.3% (n=11) and 57.9% in the control group, respectively. There were no significant differences between the groups in terms of the change in mean horizontal bone augmentation (test group: ?0.50¡¾0.66 mm vs. control groups: ?0.66¡¾0.83 mm, P=0.133), postoperative discomfort, or early wound healing. No adverse or fatal complications occurred in either group.

Conclusions: The GBR procedure with the newly developed BCP showed favorable clinical, radiographic, postoperative discomfort-related, and early wound healing outcomes for periimplant dehiscence defects that were similar to those for DBBM. Trial Registration: Clinical Research Information Service Identifier: KCT0006428
KEYWORD
Allografts, Bone regeneration, Bone substitutes, Dental implants, Randomized controlled trial
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