Insufficient evidence for sinus lifts over short implants for dental implant rehabilitation
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ABSTRACT DATA SOURCES The Cochrane Oral Health Group's Trials Register, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), Medline and Embase databases were searched with no
language or date restrictions. STUDY SELECTION Two reviewers independently selected studies. Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) of different techniques and materials for augmenting the
maxillary sinus for rehabilitation with dental implants that reported the outcome of implant success or failure at least four months after initial loading were considered. DATA EXTRACTION
AND SYNTHESIS Data were extracted independently by two reviewers and study risk of bias assessed. Results were expressed using fixed-effect models as there were either fewer than four
studies or we used Peto odds ratios (ORs) for dichotomous data when there were zero cells in either the treatment or control or both arms and the number of trials was small. RESULTS Eighteen
trials involving 650 patients were included. Five studies were considered to be at low risk of bias, 11 at high risk and two of unclear risk. Four trials (102 patients) evaluated short
implants (5 to 8.5 mm long) as an alternative to sinus lift in bone with residual height between 4 and 9 mm. One year after loading there was insufficient evidence to claim differences
between the two procedures for prosthesis failure (OR (Peto) 0.37, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.05 to 2.68; three trials) or implant failure (OR (Peto) 0.44, 95% CI 0.10 to 1.99; four
trials). There was however an increase in complications at treated sites when undertaking the sinus lift (OR (Peto) 4.77, 95% CI 1.79 to 12.71, P value = 0.002; four trials). Fourteen trials
(548 patients) compared different sinus lift techniques. Only three comparisons included more than one trial. These were bone graft versus no bone graft, autogenous bone versus bone
substitute, bone graft with or without platelet-rich plasma (PRP). There was insufficient evidence to claim a benefit for any of these techniques for the primary outcomes of prosthesis and
implant failure. The other comparisons with single studies were rotary versus piezosurgery to open a lateral sinus window, two different bone substitutes, use or not of a membrane to seal
the lateral window, one- versus two-stage lateral sinus lift, two-stage granular bone versus one-stage autogenous bone blocks and crestal versus lateral sinus lift; two trials compared three
different crestal sinus lifting techniques: rotatory versus hand malleting (patients preferred rotatory instruments over hand malleting) and hand versus electric malleting. There was no
evidence of a benefit for any sinus lift procedure compared to any other for the primary outcomes prosthesis or implant failure. CONCLUSIONS There is moderate quality evidence which is
insufficient to determine whether sinus lift procedures in bone with residual height between 4 and 9 mm are more or less successful than placing short implants (5 to 8.5 mm) in reducing
prosthesis or implant failure up to one year after loading. However, there are more complications at sites treated with sinus lift procedures. Many trials compared different sinus lift
procedures and none of these indicated that one procedure reduced prosthetic or implant failures when compared to the other. Based on low quality evidence, patients may prefer rotary
instruments over hand malleting for crestal sinus lift. You have full access to this article via your institution. Download PDF SIMILAR CONTENT BEING VIEWED BY OTHERS A META-ANALYSIS
INDICATING EXTRA-SHORT IMPLANTS (≤ 6 MM) AS AN ALTERNATIVE TO LONGER IMPLANTS (≥ 8 MM) WITH BONE AUGMENTATION Article Open access 14 April 2021 COMPARING SHORT IMPLANTS TO STANDARD DENTAL
IMPLANTS: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW AND META-ANALYSIS OF RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIALS WITH EXTENDED FOLLOW-UP Article 11 August 2023 BONE GRAFT SUBSTITUTES AND DENTAL IMPLANT STABILITY IN
IMMEDIATE IMPLANT SURGERY: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW AND META-ANALYSIS Article 11 November 2024 COMMENTARY Implant therapy has improved the treatment outcomes for restoring missing teeth in the
past decades. The key factors for long-term implant survival are bone quantity and quality. Furthermore, the rehabilitation with implant-supported prostheses of the edentulous in the
posterior maxillary regions often presents a challenge due to reduced residual alveolar bone and increased pneumatisation of the maxillary sinus. In many of these patients, sinus
augmentation procedure has been used to overcome this problem by using bone grafting. Over the last ten years, maxillary sinus augmentation procedure has become a routine indication to
increase the available bone height for implant placement and subsequent prosthetic reconstruction. Evidence-based reviews reported and compared implant survival rates in augmented sinuses
utilising various surgical techniques, implant surfaces and grafting materials.1,2 These reviews concluded that maxillary sinus augmentation can be a predictable grafting procedure for
placing dental implants in the severely atrophic posterior maxilla. However, the possibility of surgical complications exists and should be considered. Some alternative approaches have been
utilised to overcome the problem of inadequate bone quantity including, but not limited to, the use of a short implant (4 to 8 mm long). The main advantage of a short implant is that it
avoids the need for entering the sinus cavity and use of bone graft, although a minimum of 5-6 mm of residual bone height is still required. However, a critical clinical question is whether
implants placed in a grafted sinus present a higher risk of failure than the use of short implants in posterior atrophic maxillae. This is why this is a clinically relevant topic so as to
clarify the specific indications for each treatment. In 2014, an update3 of a Cochrane review first published in 20104 from the Cochrane Oral Health Group compared the predictability of bone
augmentation to no augmentation when undertaking sinus lift procedures. In addition to that, they compared different maxillary sinus augmentation techniques for implant rehabilitation. It
was conducted with an appropriate methodology, with no restrictions on language or date of publication, databases were search, a thorough critical appraisal was performed. A grade of the
evidence for each outcome was presented using the GRADE profiler, summarising the findings, quality of evidence and strength of the recommendations. The authors' grading for the overall
risk of selection bias was moderate. It concluded that there is insufficient evidence to determine whether sinus lift procedures in bone with residual height are more or less successful
than placing short implants in reducing prosthesis or implant failures. Only a few studies were included in the meta-analysis for prosthetic and implant failures. The combined statistics of
similar studies (low heterogeneity) shows no statistically significant results. There is also insufficient evidence to conclude that different sinus lift procedures lead to fewer prosthesis
or implant failures than the other. However, there was some statistically significant difference observed among studies of increased complications at sites involving sinus lift procedures.
The overall result is statistically significant. However, a large confidence interval is noted and some statistical heterogeneity was observed in the meta-analysis. The clinical
applicability of the results is inconclusive. Given the lack of evidence, and small number included in the meta-analysis, larger, long-term, well designed controlled clinical trials are
needed. Therefore, clinicians may treat suitable patients with severely atrophic posterior maxilla when a methodical preoperative evaluation is performed, including careful case planning,
surgical technique and biomaterial selection. Finally, the validity of new procedures specifically to treat these regions must be fully evaluated. REFERENCES * Del Fabbro M, Rosano G,
Taschieri S . Implant survival rates after maxillary sinus augmentation. _Eur J Oral Sci_ 2008; 116: 497–506. Article Google Scholar * Pjetursson BE, Tan WC, Zwahlen M, Lang NP . A
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Scholar * Esposito M, Felice P, Worthington HV . Interventions for replacing missing teeth: augmentation procedures of the maxillary sinus. _Cochrane Database Syst Rev_ 2014; 5: CD008397.
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Download references AUTHOR INFORMATION AUTHORS AND AFFILIATIONS * NYU College of Dentistry, New York, USA Ismael Khouly & Analia Veitz-Keenan Authors * Ismael Khouly View author
publications You can also search for this author inPubMed Google Scholar * Analia Veitz-Keenan View author publications You can also search for this author inPubMed Google Scholar ADDITIONAL
INFORMATION Address for correspondence: Luisa Fernandez Mauleffinch, Review Group Co-ordinator, Cochrane Oral Health Group, School of Dentistry, The University of Manchester, Coupland III
Building, Oxford Road, Manchester, M13 9PL, UK. E-mail: [email protected] ESPOSITO M, FELICE P, WORTHINGTON HV. Interventions for replacing missing teeth: augmentation
procedures of the maxillary sinus. _Cochrane Database Syst Rev_ 2014; 5: Art. No.CD008397. DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD008397.pub2. This paper is based on a Cochrane Review published in the
Cochrane Library 2014, issue 5 (see www.thecochranelibrary.com for information). Cochrane Reviews are regularly updated as new evidence emerges and in response to feedback, and the Cochrane
Library should be consulted for the most recent version of the review. RIGHTS AND PERMISSIONS Reprints and permissions ABOUT THIS ARTICLE CITE THIS ARTICLE Khouly, I., Veitz-Keenan, A.
Insufficient evidence for sinus lifts over short implants for dental implant rehabilitation. _Evid Based Dent_ 16, 21–22 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.ebd.6401081 Download citation *
Published: 24 April 2015 * Issue Date: March 2015 * DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.ebd.6401081 SHARE THIS ARTICLE Anyone you share the following link with will be able to read this content:
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