Skip to content

Caries Prevention Products & Dentinal Hypersensitivity

Comparing Three Caries Prevention Products on Dentinal Hypersensitivity - A Pilot Study

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT02136576
Enrollment
39
Registered
2014-05-13
Start date
2014-05-31
Completion date
2018-10-31
Last updated
2020-12-10

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Hypersensitivity

Brief summary

The aim of this pilot research project is to compare the clinical effect on dentinal hypersensitivity of three products: Casein Phosphopeptide-Amorphous Calcium Phosphate (CPP-ACP) paste with fluoride, 5000 Sodium Fluoride (NaF) dentifrice containing Tri-Calcium Phosphate (TCP), and a dentifrice containing Potassium Nitrate. The hypothesis of this study is that CPP-ACP with fluoride and 5000ppm NaF with TCP will exhibit a greater reduction in dentinal hypersensitivity compared to the control (dentifrice containing Potassium Nitrate). The results of this pilot study will validate or negate the need for a larger clinical study that may provide generalizable results for using caries-prevention products with the additional benefit of minimizing dentinal hypersensitivity.

Detailed description

Dentinal hypersensitivity commonly occurs in patients with gingival recession, resulting from a reduced periodontium or in patients who have undergone non-surgical and surgical periodontal therapy (Pradeep 2010, Yilmaz 2011). When the gingiva recede, the root surfaces of the teeth are exposed (West 2008). In addition, after a non-surgical or surgical periodontal procedure, the cementum of the root surface is removed as a result of scaling and root planing. This leaves dentin exposed on the root surface with open dentinal tubules. In addition, dentin is less mineralized than enamel and has a greater susceptibility to and a faster progression of root caries and dentinal hypersensitivity (Saunders 2005). Root caries commonly occurs in patients who have undergone periodontal therapy and extensive root caries often results in the extraction of the tooth (Hull 1997). Dental professionals often make a variety of recommendations to remedy dental hypersensitivity, including the application of fluoride varnishes, anti-hypersensitivity toothpaste, gingival grafting procedures and various restorative procedures, aiming to occlude the dentinal tubules or desensitize the pulpal nerve endings (Brahmbhatt 2012, Orsini 2010). Since the introduction of Caries Management By Risk Assessment (CAMBRA) in the Journal of the California Dental Association in 2007 (Jenson 2007, Young 2007), the marketplace for anti-caries products has surged. As a result, many approaches to the management of dental caries have been introduced and dental practitioners and sales representatives have promoted several anti-caries products. In addition, the reduction or the abatement of the progression of dental caries (coronal, root and interproximal) as a result of a caries management program has been reported (Featherstone 1992, Ito 2012). Many caries management products have ingredients that include fluoride and calcium phosphate (Amorphous Calcium Phosphate-Casein Phosphopeptide (Recaldent ™), (Wang 2012) Tri-Calcium Phosphate ™ or Novamin ™) (Su 2011). Moreover, encouraging clinical findings have been reported, including, but not limited to the reduction of white spot enamel lesions and dentinal hypersensitivity (Kowalczyk 2006). The topical application of antihypersensitivity materials is a common recommendation (least invasive of the standard of care recommendations) to diminish dentinal hypersensitivity and will serve to provide data for the research study. The study will evaluate which of these products result in the greatest reduction of dentinal hypersensitivity. The application of the experimental products for the reduction of dentinal hypersensitivity is for research purposes. The methods used to test sensitivity in this study have been used in published studies (Brahmbhatt 2012, Holland 1997). The VAS scale used in this study has also been used for tooth sensitivity studies (Holland 1997, Hughes 2010). A 30% decrease in VAS score has been shown to be clinically meaningful (Ritter 2006, Raymond 2008). This pilot study would investigate the ability of anti-caries products to reduce dentinal hypersensitivity when compared to a sensitivity-reducing dentifrice. It would be a novel contribution to the dental community if a material that is proven to reduce tooth decay is also proven to reduce dentinal hypersensitivity. The results may potentially have a tremendous impact on the dental community because it may provide dental professionals a scientifically-supported approach to improve the comfort and quality of life of periodontal patients (patients who are treated for gum disease/ bone loss around teeth) and increase the lifespan of teeth that undergo periodontal treatment.

Interventions

DEVICESensodyne

Subjects will be instructed to brush with Sensodyne twice daily (2 minutes each time in the morning and the evening) during the duration of the study.

DEVICECrest Cavity Protection & MI Paste Plus

Subjects will be instructed to brush twice daily (2 minutes each time in the morning and the evening) using Crest Cavity Protection toothpaste. They will be instructed to apply MI Paste Plus (CPP-ACP with fluoride) twice daily to the study teeth after brushing their teeth. MI Paste Plus will be applied to the study teeth with a finger.

Subjects will be instructed to brush with Clinpro 5000 twice daily (2 minutes each time in the morning and the evening) during duration of the study.

Sponsors

Tufts University
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE (Investigator)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

* At least 18 years of age * Tooth with exposed root surface and/or exposed dentin * Tooth with a VAS score greater than or equal to 3 * No adjacent tooth/teeth with sensitivity (as defined as 2 or higher on the VAS)

Exclusion criteria

* Participation in another dental study that may alter the results of this study. * A medical condition that could interfere with reliable pain reporting (e.g., pain disorders) * Any chronic medical condition that requires the regular use of pain or anti-inflammatory medications * Used a desensitizing dentifrice within the preceding four weeks * Have received an antihypersensitivity treatment (varnish or precipitating solution) of the identified tooth within the preceding four weeks * Undergoing active orthodontic treatment. * Teeth with carious lesions, buccal vertical cracks in enamel, evidence of irreversible pulpitis (pain lasting more than five seconds after air stimulation) * Pregnant/ lactating patients (Clinpro5000 has 5000ppm fluoride and there is a risk of ingesting the product) * Patients with Milk Allergy (CPP-ACP is a dairy based product) * Patients on Kidney Dialysis (due to the free calcium in CPP-ACP, dialysis patients should be on a diet with limited calcium)

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Dentinal Hypersensitivity8 weeks after baselineThe primary analysis will be to compare the dentinal hypersensitivity between the 3 groups. Air test: A 1 second blast of air from the air-water syringe was applied to the tooth. Water test: Three drops of ice water were be placed on the tooth. Schiff Score Investigator observed participant reaction to test and scored on following scale: 0-Tooth/Subject does not respond to stimulus. 1. Tooth/Subject responds to stimulus, but does not request discontinuation of stimulus. 2. Tooth/Subject responds to stimulus and requests discontinuation or moves from stimulus. 3. Tooth/Subject responds to stimulus, considers stimulus to be painful, and requests discontinuation of the stimulus VAS (visual analog scale): The participant reported sensitivity on a scale of 0-10. 0 being no pain and 10 being worst pain imaginable.

Countries

United States

Participant flow

Participants by arm

ArmCount
Sensodyne
There are no specific characteristics for inclusion in this group. Enrollment will be determined randomly. Sensodyne: Subjects will be instructed to brush with Sensodyne twice daily (2 minutes each time in the morning and the evening) during the duration of the study.
13
Sensodyne
There are no specific characteristics for inclusion in this group. Enrollment will be determined randomly. Sensodyne: Subjects will be instructed to brush with Sensodyne twice daily (2 minutes each time in the morning and the evening) during the duration of the study.
13
Crest Cavity Protection & MI Paste Plus
There are no specific characteristics for inclusion in this group. Enrollment will be determined randomly. Crest Cavity Protection & MI Paste Plus: Subjects will be instructed to brush twice daily (2 minutes each time in the morning and the evening) using Crest Cavity Protection toothpaste. They will be instructed to apply MI Paste Plus (CPP-ACP with fluoride) twice daily to the study teeth after brushing their teeth. MI Paste Plus will be applied to the study teeth with a finger.
13
Crest Cavity Protection & MI Paste Plus
There are no specific characteristics for inclusion in this group. Enrollment will be determined randomly. Crest Cavity Protection & MI Paste Plus: Subjects will be instructed to brush twice daily (2 minutes each time in the morning and the evening) using Crest Cavity Protection toothpaste. They will be instructed to apply MI Paste Plus (CPP-ACP with fluoride) twice daily to the study teeth after brushing their teeth. MI Paste Plus will be applied to the study teeth with a finger.
13
Clinpro 5000
There are no specific characteristics for inclusion in this group. Enrollment will be determined randomly. Clinpro 5000: Subjects will be instructed to brush with Clinpro 5000 twice daily (2 minutes each time in the morning and the evening) during duration of the study.
13
Clinpro 5000
There are no specific characteristics for inclusion in this group. Enrollment will be determined randomly. Clinpro 5000: Subjects will be instructed to brush with Clinpro 5000 twice daily (2 minutes each time in the morning and the evening) during duration of the study.
13
Total78

Withdrawals & dropouts

PeriodReasonFG000FG001FG002
Overall StudyLost to Follow-up200

Baseline characteristics

CharacteristicTotalSensodyneCrest Cavity Protection & MI Paste PlusClinpro 5000
Age, Categorical
<=18 years
0 Participants0 Participants0 Participants0 Participants
Age, Categorical
>=65 years
2 Participants0 Participants2 Participants0 Participants
Age, Categorical
Between 18 and 65 years
37 Participants13 Participants11 Participants13 Participants
Age, Continuous48.85 years
STANDARD_DEVIATION 13.12
55.08 years
STANDARD_DEVIATION 7.99
45.62 years
STANDARD_DEVIATION 15.23
45.85 years
STANDARD_DEVIATION 13.64
Baseline Dentinal Hypersensitivity
Air Schiff
1 units on a scale1 units on a scale1 units on a scale1 units on a scale
Baseline Dentinal Hypersensitivity
Air VAS
5 units on a scale5 units on a scale5 units on a scale5 units on a scale
Baseline Dentinal Hypersensitivity
Water Schiff
1 units on a scale1 units on a scale1 units on a scale1 units on a scale
Baseline Dentinal Hypersensitivity
Water VAS
6 units on a scale6 units on a scale6 units on a scale6 units on a scale
Race (NIH/OMB)
American Indian or Alaska Native
0 Participants0 Participants0 Participants0 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
Asian
11 Participants2 Participants4 Participants5 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
Black or African American
11 Participants4 Participants3 Participants4 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
More than one race
2 Participants1 Participants0 Participants1 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
0 Participants0 Participants0 Participants0 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
Unknown or Not Reported
0 Participants0 Participants0 Participants0 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
White
15 Participants6 Participants6 Participants3 Participants
Region of Enrollment
United States
39 Participants13 Participants13 Participants13 Participants
Sex: Female, Male
Female
24 Participants8 Participants9 Participants7 Participants
Sex: Female, Male
Male
15 Participants5 Participants4 Participants6 Participants

Adverse events

Event typeEG000
affected / at risk
EG001
affected / at risk
EG002
affected / at risk
deaths
Total, all-cause mortality
0 / 130 / 130 / 13
other
Total, other adverse events
2 / 133 / 131 / 13
serious
Total, serious adverse events
0 / 130 / 130 / 13

Outcome results

Primary

Dentinal Hypersensitivity

The primary analysis will be to compare the dentinal hypersensitivity between the 3 groups. Air test: A 1 second blast of air from the air-water syringe was applied to the tooth. Water test: Three drops of ice water were be placed on the tooth. Schiff Score Investigator observed participant reaction to test and scored on following scale: 0-Tooth/Subject does not respond to stimulus. 1. Tooth/Subject responds to stimulus, but does not request discontinuation of stimulus. 2. Tooth/Subject responds to stimulus and requests discontinuation or moves from stimulus. 3. Tooth/Subject responds to stimulus, considers stimulus to be painful, and requests discontinuation of the stimulus VAS (visual analog scale): The participant reported sensitivity on a scale of 0-10. 0 being no pain and 10 being worst pain imaginable.

Time frame: 8 weeks after baseline

ArmMeasureGroupValue (MEDIAN)
SensodyneDentinal HypersensitivityWater Schiff1 units on a scale
SensodyneDentinal HypersensitivityAir Schiff1 units on a scale
SensodyneDentinal HypersensitivityWater VAS4 units on a scale
SensodyneDentinal HypersensitivityAir VAS3 units on a scale
Crest Cavity Protection & MI Paste PlusDentinal HypersensitivityAir VAS2 units on a scale
Crest Cavity Protection & MI Paste PlusDentinal HypersensitivityWater Schiff1 units on a scale
Crest Cavity Protection & MI Paste PlusDentinal HypersensitivityWater VAS2 units on a scale
Crest Cavity Protection & MI Paste PlusDentinal HypersensitivityAir Schiff1 units on a scale
Clinpro 5000Dentinal HypersensitivityWater VAS2 units on a scale
Clinpro 5000Dentinal HypersensitivityAir Schiff0 units on a scale
Clinpro 5000Dentinal HypersensitivityWater Schiff1 units on a scale
Clinpro 5000Dentinal HypersensitivityAir VAS2 units on a scale
Comparison: Assuming the control group may exhibit a modest improvement in dentinal hypersensitivity (\~5%) whereas the two test groups should demonstrate a more significant improvement (\~30%). Assuming a common standard deviation of 25%, we will have 58% power to detect a difference between the 3 groups using one way analysis of variance, with 10 subjects per group, and setting alpha to 0.05 (nQuery Advisor, Version 7.0). Up to 13 subjects per group will be recruited, to allow for a 20% dropout rate.p-value: 0.72Kruskal-Wallis
Comparison: Assuming the control group may exhibit a modest improvement in dentinal hypersensitivity (\~5%) whereas the two test groups should demonstrate a more significant improvement (\~30%). Assuming a common standard deviation of 25%, we will have 58% power to detect a difference between the 3 groups using one way analysis of variance, with 10 subjects per group, and setting alpha to 0.05 (nQuery Advisor, Version 7.0). Up to 13 subjects per group will be recruited, to allow for a 20% dropout rate.p-value: 0.93Kruskal-Wallis
Comparison: Assuming the control group may exhibit a modest improvement in dentinal hypersensitivity (\~5%) whereas the two test groups should demonstrate a more significant improvement (\~30%). Assuming a common standard deviation of 25%, we will have 58% power to detect a difference between the 3 groups using one way analysis of variance, with 10 subjects per group, and setting alpha to 0.05 (nQuery Advisor, Version 7.0). Up to 13 subjects per group will be recruited, to allow for a 20% dropout rate.p-value: 0.77Kruskal-Wallis
Comparison: Assuming the control group may exhibit a modest improvement in dentinal hypersensitivity (\~5%) whereas the two test groups should demonstrate a more significant improvement (\~30%). Assuming a common standard deviation of 25%, we will have 58% power to detect a difference between the 3 groups using one way analysis of variance, with 10 subjects per group, and setting alpha to 0.05 (nQuery Advisor, Version 7.0). Up to 13 subjects per group will be recruited, to allow for a 20% dropout rate.p-value: 0.93Kruskal-Wallis

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026