Abstract

ObjectivesDental caries occur through a multifactorial process that may influence all tooth surfaces throughout an individual’s life. The application of decision analytical modeling (DAM) has gained an increasing level of attention in long-term outcome assessment and economic evaluation of interventions on caries in recent years. The objective of this study was to systematically review the application of DAM and assess their methodological quality in the context of dental caries.MethodsA systematic review of the literature published to 31st December 2018 was conducted in Medline, EMBASE, NHSEED, and Web of Science electronic databases. The main information and model characteristics of studies was extracted with the methodological quality of included studies reviewed and assessed using the Philips’ checklist.ResultsTwenty five studies from different settings were included. Modeling techniques mainly comprised main type of modeling including Markov models (n = 12), Markov/microsimulation mixed model (n = 7), systematic dynamic models (n = 3), microsimulation models (n = 2) and decision tree (n = 1). The mean number of criteria fulfilled was 25.1 out of 60 items, which varied between year of study and research groups. The percentage of criteria fulfilled for data dimension was lower than for the structure and consistency dimension. Critical issues were data quality, incorporation of utility values, and uncertainty analysis in modeling.ConclusionThe current review revealed that the methodological quality of DAM in dental caries economic evaluations is unsatisfied. Future modeling studies should adhere more closely to good practice guidelines, especially with respect to data quality evaluation, utility values incorporation, and uncertainty analysis in DAM based studies.

Highlights

  • Dental caries is a multifactorial process that may influence all tooth surfaces throughout an individual’s life [1]

  • The current review revealed that the methodological quality of decision analytical modeling (DAM) in dental caries economic evaluations is unsatisfied

  • The World Health Organization (WHO) has estimated that caries accounted for almost 1.9 million disability adjusted life years (DALYs) globally in 2015, which is even more than the number caused by natural disasters [6]

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Summary

Introduction

Dental caries is a multifactorial process that may influence all tooth surfaces throughout an individual’s life [1]. As one of the most prevalent chronic diseases [2,3,4], untreated dental caries affects 2.5 billion people worldwide with an all-age group combined prevalence of 34% [5]. If untreated, permanent tooth decay and loss can result in disability. The World Health Organization (WHO) has estimated that caries accounted for almost 1.9 million disability adjusted life years (DALYs) globally in 2015, which is even more than the number caused by natural disasters [6]. Dental caries presents a considerable public health problem in both developed and developing countries

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