Silver diamine fluoride for the management of dental caries in children in primary dental care: protocol for a feasibility study.

IF 1.5 Q3 MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL
Laura Timms, Helen Rodd, Chris Deery, Paul Brocklehurst, Zoe Marshman
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Dental caries remains a significant problem in England, affecting 11% of 3-year-olds and 23% of 5-year-olds. While current approaches have been extensively investigated, their ability to (1) control pain and infection; (2) prevent hospital admissions, and (3) be implemented within the National Health Service (NHS) contractual arrangements, remains unsatisfactory. Silver diamine fluoride (SDF) is an alternative, non-invasive approach that has proven efficacy in arresting caries progression in primary teeth, principally from studies conducted outside of Europe. Its use in primary dental care in the UK is limited, despite the acknowledged need. The clinical and cost-effectiveness of SDF has not been compared to usual care in the UK. Before a pragmatic randomised controlled trial (RCT) can be conducted to compare SDF to usual care for caries management in young children, there are several uncertainties that require investigation. This study aims to establish whether such an RCT is feasible.

Methods: This mixed-method parallel design study is a feasibility study with an embedded process evaluation, to compare SDF with usual treatment in primary dental care in the UK. It will be individually randomised, with 13 dentists and therapists, in 8 different dental primary care sites with a sample size of 80 child participants aged 1-8 years old. The aim will be to recruit ten participants per site with equal arm allocation. Follow-up will be for 1 year. The study will inform whether an RCT is feasible by resolving several key uncertainties. The acceptability and implementation of SDF and the research processes will be explored. Patient and Public Involvement and Engagement representatives will be involved throughout recruitment and retention strategies, participant documentation, analysis, engagement and dissemination.

Discussion: The ability to conduct an RCT will be evaluated. If feasible, this RCT has the potential to evaluate the effectiveness of a non-invasive approach for the management of untreated caries in young children. A feasibility study also offers the opportunity to consider factors associated with the implementation of SDF at an early stage through a process evaluation that will inform the definitive trial and an implementation strategy for SDF by identifying relevant barriers and facilitators.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT06092151. Date: 19/10/2023.

在初级牙科保健中使用二胺氟化银治疗儿童龋齿:可行性研究方案。
背景:在英格兰,龋齿仍然是一个严重的问题,影响着11%的3岁儿童和23%的5岁儿童。虽然对现有方法进行了广泛研究,但这些方法在以下方面的能力仍不能令人满意:(1)控制疼痛和感染;(2)防止入院;(3)在国民健康服务(NHS)合同安排范围内实施。二胺氟化银(SDF)是一种替代性、非侵入性方法,主要在欧洲以外进行的研究已证明其在阻止基牙龋齿发展方面的功效。在英国,尽管公认有此需要,但在初级牙科保健中的使用却很有限。在英国,SDF 的临床和成本效益尚未与常规护理进行比较。在进行实用随机对照试验(RCT)以比较 SDF 和常规护理对幼儿龋齿的治疗效果之前,有几个不确定因素需要调查。本研究旨在确定这种随机对照试验是否可行:这项混合方法平行设计研究是一项可行性研究,其中包含一项过程评估,目的是比较 SDF 与英国初级牙科保健中的常规治疗。该研究将在 8 个不同的牙科初级保健机构中,由 13 名牙医和治疗师进行单独随机抽样,样本量为 80 名 1-8 岁的儿童参与者。目标是在每个地点招募 10 名参与者,并进行平等的手臂分配。随访期为 1 年。该研究将通过解决几个关键的不确定因素,为研究性试验是否可行提供信息。还将探讨 SDF 的可接受性和实施情况以及研究过程。患者和公众参与代表将全程参与招募和保留策略、参与者记录、分析、参与和传播:将对开展 RCT 的能力进行评估。如果可行,该 RCT 有可能评估一种非侵入性方法在管理幼儿未治疗龋齿方面的有效性。可行性研究还提供了一个机会,通过过程评估来考虑与早期实施SDF相关的因素,并通过确定相关障碍和促进因素为最终试验和SDF实施策略提供信息:试验注册:ClinicalTrials.gov identifier:NCT06092151.日期:2023 年 10 月 19 日。
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来源期刊
Pilot and Feasibility Studies
Pilot and Feasibility Studies Medicine-Medicine (miscellaneous)
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
5.90%
发文量
241
审稿时长
9 weeks
期刊介绍: Pilot and Feasibility Studies encompasses all aspects of the design, conduct and reporting of pilot and feasibility studies in biomedicine. The journal publishes research articles that are intended to directly influence future clinical trials or large scale observational studies, as well as protocols, commentaries and methodology articles. The journal also ensures that the results of all well-conducted, peer-reviewed, pilot and feasibility studies are published, regardless of outcome or significance of findings. Pilot and feasibility studies are increasingly conducted prior to a full randomized controlled trial. However, these studies often lack clear objectives, many remain unpublished, and there is confusion over the meanings of the words “pilot” and “feasibility”. Pilot and Feasibility Studies provides a forum for discussion around this key aspect of the scientific process, and seeks to ensure that these studies are published, so as to complete the publication thread for clinical research.
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