Rodrigo A Giacaman, Catalina A Maturana, José Molina, Catherine M C Volgenant, Constanza E Fernández
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PubMed, Scopus, and Web of Science databases were searched using predefined criteria, based on the PICO question: Is there an effect on dental caries upon adding CPP-ACP to milk, chewing gums, or candies? No year or language limits were applied. Article selection and data extraction were carried out independently by 2 investigators. Two hundred ten titles were examined, 23 were selected for full-text review, and 16 studies were included (2 in vivo and 14 in situ). CPP-ACP was added to candy in 2 studies, to milk in 2 studies, and to chewing gum in 12 studies. The main outcomes included enamel remineralization and activity against dental biofilm. The overall quality of the evidence was classified as moderate. The available evidence suggests that CPP-ACP added to milk, chewing gum, or candy has a potential remineralizing activity on tooth enamel, with some additional antibacterial activity on the dental biofilm. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
酪蛋白是研究最多的具有抗龋活性的蛋白质之一。酪蛋白磷酸肽-无定形磷酸钙(CPP-ACP)具有良好的再矿化性能。然而,在食品中添加CPP-ACP的抗肿瘤潜力的体内证据是难以捉摸的。因此,本系统综述旨在确定添加到食品中的CPP-ACP是否对体内或原位牙齿脱矿具有再矿化或抑制作用。审查方案遵循PRISMA-P标准,并在PROSPERO登记。PubMed、Scopus和Web of Science数据库使用预先定义的标准进行检索,基于PICO问题:在牛奶、口香糖或糖果中添加CPP-ACP对龋齿有影响吗?没有年份或语言限制。文章选择和数据提取由2名研究者独立进行。我们审查了210篇文献,其中23篇被选为全文综述,并纳入了16项研究(2项体内研究,14项原位研究)。2项研究将CPP-ACP添加到糖果中,2项研究将其添加到牛奶中,12项研究将其添加到口香糖中。主要结果包括牙釉质再矿化和抗牙生物膜活性。证据的总体质量被归为中等。现有证据表明,添加到牛奶、口香糖或糖果中的CPP-ACP对牙釉质有潜在的再矿化活性,对牙生物膜有一些额外的抗菌活性。这种效果在减少龋齿发生率或恢复脱矿过程中是否具有临床意义,还需要进一步的临床研究来验证。
Effect of Casein Phosphopeptide-Amorphous Calcium Phosphate Added to Milk, Chewing Gum, and Candy on Dental Caries: A Systematic Review.
Casein is one of the most studied proteins with activity against dental caries. In particular, casein phosphopeptide-amorphous calcium phosphate (CPP-ACP) has shown promising remineralizing properties. In vivo evidence on the anticaries potential of CPP-ACP added to foodstuffs is elusive, nonetheless. Hence, this systematic review aimed at determining whether the use of CPP-ACP added to foodstuffs has a remineralizing or inhibitory action on dental demineralization either in vivo or in situ. The review protocol followed the PRISMA-P criteria and was registered in PROSPERO. PubMed, Scopus, and Web of Science databases were searched using predefined criteria, based on the PICO question: Is there an effect on dental caries upon adding CPP-ACP to milk, chewing gums, or candies? No year or language limits were applied. Article selection and data extraction were carried out independently by 2 investigators. Two hundred ten titles were examined, 23 were selected for full-text review, and 16 studies were included (2 in vivo and 14 in situ). CPP-ACP was added to candy in 2 studies, to milk in 2 studies, and to chewing gum in 12 studies. The main outcomes included enamel remineralization and activity against dental biofilm. The overall quality of the evidence was classified as moderate. The available evidence suggests that CPP-ACP added to milk, chewing gum, or candy has a potential remineralizing activity on tooth enamel, with some additional antibacterial activity on the dental biofilm. Further clinical studies are needed to verify if this effect is clinically significant in reducing the caries lesion incidence or to revert the demineralizing process.
期刊介绍:
''Caries Research'' publishes epidemiological, clinical and laboratory studies in dental caries, erosion and related dental diseases. Some studies build on the considerable advances already made in caries prevention, e.g. through fluoride application. Some aim to improve understanding of the increasingly important problem of dental erosion and the associated tooth wear process. Others monitor the changing pattern of caries in different populations, explore improved methods of diagnosis or evaluate methods of prevention or treatment. The broad coverage of current research has given the journal an international reputation as an indispensable source for both basic scientists and clinicians engaged in understanding, investigating and preventing dental disease.