Underdiagnosis in Background of Emerging Public Health Challenges Related to Peri-Implant Diseases: An Interventional Split-Mouth Study

Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2022 Dec 28;20(1):477. doi: 10.3390/ijerph20010477.

Abstract

Peri-implant diseases are an emerging public health problem, and it's considered that limitations of standard diagnostics play the role herein. The study objective was the estimation of pathological bone resorption at clinical and biological level in patients with peri-implant mucositis (PIM) and peri-implantitis (PI) before and 6 months after standard treatment and to compare them with healthy controls (HC). The split-mouth interventional study included 60 patients affected with PIM or PI. Patients that also presented at least one more HC were enrolled in the study and underwent standard non-surgical and surgical treatment, respectively. Standard clinical parameters and soluble levels of RANKL were measured in peri-implant crevicular fluid baseline and 6 months following treatment. Clinical parameters and RANKL significantly decreased following treatment in PIM and PI. However, bleeding on probing and probing depth remained significantly increased when compared to HC. RANKL answered requests for biomarker of peri-implant diseases, its baseline levels were significantly increased in PIM and PI, they decreased following treatment and reached HC in peri-implantitis, while in PIM RANKL remained significantly increased. Presence of pathological bone resorption in patients lacked its clinical signs, and respective persistence following treatment suggest the need for biomarker-supported diagnosis for timely diagnosis of peri-implantitis and appropriate orientation of respective management strategies.

Keywords: biomarker; bone loss; early diagnosis; peri-implant diseases; peri-implant mucositis; peri-implantitis; precision medicine; public health; treatment.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Bone Resorption*
  • Humans
  • Peri-Implantitis* / diagnosis
  • Periodontal Index
  • Public Health

Grants and funding

This study was supported by the Ministry of Education and Science, Republic of Serbia (project references #41008 and #173056) and by Medical Military Academy, Republic of Serbia (MFVMA 07/22-24).