Abstract

BackgroundPredicting future risk for oral diseases, treatment need and prognosis are tasks performed daily in clinical practice. A large variety of methods have been reported, ranging from clinical judgement or “gut feeling” or even patient interviewing, to complex assessments of combinations of known risk factors. In clinical practice, there is an ongoing continuous search for less complicated and more valid tools for risk assessment. There is also a lack of knowledge how different common methods relates to one another. The aim of this study was to investigate if caries risk assessment (CRA) based on clinical judgement and the Cariogram model give similar results. In addition, to assess which factors from clinical status and history agree best with the CRA based on clinical judgement and how the patient’s own perception of future oral treatment need correspond with the sum of examiners risk score.MethodsClinical examinations were performed on randomly selected individuals 20–89 years old living in Skåne, Sweden. In total, 451 individuals were examined, 51 % women. The clinical examination included caries detection, saliva samples and radiographic examination together with history and a questionnaire. The examiners made a risk classification and the authors made a second risk calculation according to the Cariogram.ResultsFor those assessed as low risk using the Cariogram 69 % also were assessed as low risk based on clinical judgement. For the other risk groups the agreement was lower. Clinical variables that significantly related to CRA based on clinical judgement were DS (decayed surfaces) and combining DS and incipient lesions, DMFT (decayed, missed, filled teeth), plaque amount, history and soft drink intake. Patients’ perception of future oral treatment need correlated to some extent with the sum of examiners risk score.ConclusionsThe main finding was that CRA based on clinical judgement and the Cariogram model gave similar results for the groups that were predicted at low level of future disease, but not so well for the other groups. CRA based on clinical judgement agreed best with the number of DS plus incipient lesions.

Highlights

  • Predicting future risk for oral diseases, treatment need and prognosis are tasks performed daily in clinical practice

  • Most dentists perform some form of caries risk assessment based on their clinical judgement (CRA based on clinical judgement), which together with past caries experience has been shown to have good predictive power [4, 5]

  • If CRA based on clinical judgement using guidelines and CRA based on the Cariogram model give similar results and if risk profiles varies with age

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Summary

Introduction

Predicting future risk for oral diseases, treatment need and prognosis are tasks performed daily in clinical practice. CRA based on clinical judgement is based on how the dentist, by using history and clinical data of the patient, predicts future caries development. Many risk assessment systems, including the one used by the Swedish Public Dental Service (PDS), include a concept of risk assessment and risk grouping in order to direct the caregiver and act as a helping tool to plan an optimal care. For caries, such programs have not been compared to validated models for CRA as the Cariogram has been. It is of interest to compare the outcome of caries risk determined by clinical judgement and the Cariogram which has been studied in relation to predictive power [8, 9, 16]

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