BackgroundRisk factors for medication-related osteonecrosis of the jaw (MRONJ) are well known, although few studies evaluate the factors that influence treatment outcomes in MRONJ and whether discontinuing antiresorptive medication influences healing. Purpose(1) Describe the characteristics of a population of patients with MRONJ. (2) Identify the factors associated with favourable outcomes. (3) Identify a temporal correlation between discontinuation of antiresorptives and healing time. MethodsA retrospective longitudinal cohort study was carried out, including 77 patients with MRONJ treated between 2004 and 2016. Primary outcome was defined as healed/improved vs. worse/stable. Time to healing was set as the secondary outcome. Statistical significance was defined as p < 0.05. ResultsPrimary disease, route of administration, lesion location, and development of complications influenced the outcome of treatment. Significant differences in outcomes according to primary disease (p < 0.05) were found when staging, gender, and lesion location were held constant. Time to healing was longer for patients who discontinued medication more than 3 months after diagnosis than for those who discontinued at diagnosis or before – respectively, 36, 9, and 7 months (p = 0.01). ConclusionsThe outcome of MRONJ treatment may be influenced by primary disease and route of administration of antiresorptives. Antiresorptive medication discontinuation contributes to reduce healing time in MRONJ.