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  <content>             The Value of Consensus
Editorials
             Conferences: Peer review by
             50 key opinion leaders!
                       Richard Bengt PRICE                                                  Jean-François ROULET
                       BDS, DDS, MS. PhD                                       DDS, Habil, Prof hc, Dr hc, Professor
                       FDS RCS (Edin), FRCD(C), Professor                                           Editor-in-Chief




               Dear readers,
               Fifty years ago, for the most part, all the dentist had to know about direct restorative materials was how to
               use dental amalgam and silicate cement. The preparation design for amalgams was well understood, and
               mechanical retention was a fundamental requirement. Reliable adhesion to both dentin and enamel was
               utopian, metal free ceramics were not durable, and light-cured resins had yet to be developed. Today, we have
               a multitude of materials and techniques that enable the dentist to produce direct and indirect restorations that
               are practically undetectable for both the dentist and the patient. However, there are tremendous consequences
               from having so many restorative materials and techniques available, and it has become more and more difficult
               for both practitioners and university professors to find their way through what is now considered a restorative
               jungle. On the one side, the internet offers in milliseconds a vast amount of information, which often sounds
               interesting and authoritative but, unfortunately, it is not always correct. Most dental schools claim to teach
               evidence-based dentistry and focus on providing treatment recommendations that are free from bias and
               based on prospective randomized double-blinded clinical trials. This approach should ascertain the truth,
               but has some severe disadvantages. Firstly, it requires a long time for valid results to be produced; secondly,
               patients cannot be standardized; thirdly, there is often an element of bias in that the exclusion criteria for the
               very studies that we rely on often eliminate some significant parts of populations that are candidates for the
               treatment being evaluated. Finally, ethical considerations often limit the questions that can be asked from a
               prospective randomized, double-blinded clinical trial. This is further compounded by the fact that it has been
               estimated that more than 95% of recent prosthodontic and implant review articles failed to use search strategies
               that were systematic, thus undermining the conclusions upon which treatment decisions are based [1].
               One solution to the problems described above is a consensus conference. The principle is the following: experts,
               key opinion leaders, who represent the profession and industry come prepared to discuss a well-defined topic.
               Based on all their combined scientific, clinical and epidemiologic knowledge, together with presentations, a
               structured discussion occurs, in which proven, accepted information is sorted out from less valid information.
               In essence, this is now peer review by some 50 key opinion leaders instead of peer review by 2 or 3 selected
               reviewers for a ’peer reviewed’ journal publication. At the end of such a conference, a draft consensus paper is
               formulated, which is subsequently reviewed, edited and approved by those key opinion leaders.
               The Northern Light conferences at Dalhousie University in Halifax (Canada) have produced such recommendations
               for the light curing of direct restorations (2014) [2-4], dental light-curing units (2015) [5], bulk-fill restorations (2016)


202                                                        Stoma Edu J. 2018;5(4):202-204.               http://www.stomaeduj.com
[6], and light-curing adhesives (2017) [7,8]. In July 2018, 50 dentists, scientists, clinicians, teachers, manufacturers,




                                                                                                                                                                      Editorials
editors, and key opinion leaders met in Oslo for 3 days to discuss two topics, the light curing of indirect restorations
and what exactly is meant by the term ‘bioactive' in the context of restorative materials. The complexity of the
latter topic made for spirited discussions, however, after several rounds of refinement, we are proud to present
the following consensus statements as part of this editorial. We hope that this information will help dentists
provide restorations that exhibit excellent longevity. The information will also help the reader understand
what a bioactive restorative material should do.


Sincerely yours,
R. Price and J.-F. Roulet


References

1.   Layton D. A critical review of search strategies used in recent systematic reviews published in selected prosthodontic and implant-related journals: are
     systematic reviews actually systematic? Int J Prosthodont. 2017;30(1):13-21.
     [PubMed] Google Scholar(5) Scopus(5)
2.   Roulet JF, Price R. Light curing - guidelines for practitioners - a consensus statement from the 2014 symposium on light curing in dentistry held at Dalhousie
     University, Halifax, Canada. J Adhes Dent. 2014;16(4):303-304.
     [Full text links] [PubMed] Google Scholar(13) Scopus(6)
3.   Watts DC. Let there be More Light! Dent Mater. 2015;31(4):315-316.
     [Pub Med] Google Scholar(4) Scopus(2)
4.   Platt JA, Price RB. Light curing explored in Halifax. Oper Dent. 2014;39(6):561-563.
     [Full text links] [PubMed] Google Scholar(7) Scopus(4)
5.   Strassler H, Oxman J, Rueggeberg F. Light Curing- Tips on Choosing Your Next Curing Light. CDA Essentials 2016;3:30-33.
     http://www.cda-adc.ca/en/services/essentials/2016/issue6/#1
6.   Price R. Consesnsus Statements on Bulk Fill Composites. Canada Dental Assoc.
     http://oasisdiscussions.ca/2017/06/07/csbf/
7.   Gianinni M. Diretrices para obter sucesso clinico na adesão as estruturas dental. THE International Journal Of Esthetic Dentistry, v. 3, n. 2, 2018 (218-221).
8.   Strassler HE, Alkhuabizi Q, Ganesh N. Reimaginng Dental Bonding: Predictable Restorations for Patients. Compendium of Continuing Education eBook, Nov
     2018.
     https://www.aegisdentalnetwork.com/media/71589; https://www.aegisdentalnetwork.com/cced/ebooks/reimagining-dental-bonding-predictable-
     restorations-for-patients/?hq_e=el&amp;hq_m=5472145&amp;hq_l=10&amp;hq_v=b02f196240




Light Transmission through Indirect Restorative Materials
a) There is an exponential decline in the amount of light that reaches the bottom of the restoration as its
   thickness increases.
b) There are considerable differences in the amount of light that is transmitted through the various types and
   shades of restorative material.
c) The shorter wavelengths (violet, ~ 410 nm) do not pass through materials as well as longer wavelengths
   (blue, ~ 460 nm) of light.
d) Future studies should account for external and internal reflection, refraction, and absorption due to
   variation in the surface finish and the incident angle of the light.
At the meeting, it was agreed that, when luting indirect restorations, dentists should:
• use the recommended adhesive - cement combinations, particularly when using self-etching universal
   adhesives together with dual-cure” resin cements;
• recognize that resins that are solely light-cured must receive sufficient light, check the thickness of the
   restoration, and stay within the cement manufacturer’s instructions for use;
• recognize that most “dual curing” resin materials benefit from receiving additional light exposure;
• recognize that doubling the exposure time will not compensate for the reduction in transmitted light if the
   thickness of the restorative material thickness has doubled (e.g., from 1.0 to 2.0 mm);
• use “self-curing” or “dark-curing” resin cement systems that do not require any additional light when they
   are concerned that insufficient light will be delivered to the resin cement.




Stomatology Edu Journal                                                                                                                                                203
             Bioactive Restorative Materials (filling materials, adhesives, and cements)
Editorials
             “Bioactivity” applied to a dental restorative material should describe an active beneficial biological process. It
             is suggested that dental restorative materials may be called “bioactive” if, in addition to their primary function
             of restoring or replacing missing tooth structure, they actively stimulate or direct specific cellular or tissue
             responses, or both, or they can control interactions with microbiological species. Such effects should be
             characterized by the field of application, the effect, and how the effect was scientifically proven.
             The term “bioactive” may also be found in a wider sense to describe restorative materials that have one or
             more of the following:
             • a character that causes the formation of reparative tissue;
             • component(s) that dissolve that can be identified with normal physiological species that are involved in a
                 biological process;
             • component(s) that dissolve and happen to have antimicrobial activity (this includes high-pH materials);
             • a surface conducive to cell attachment;
             • a surface that may nucleate the formation of biological-like calcium phosphates, including bioapatite-like
                 material, when in contact with saliva or tissue fluids;
             • component(s) that dissolve and thereby cause local precipitation of biological-like calcium phosphates,
                 including bioapatite-like materials, in a purely passive chemical process.
             The Northern Light conferences at Dalhousie University in Halifax (Canada) have produced such
             recommendations for the light curing of direct restorations (2014) [2-4], dental light-curing units (2015) [5],
             bulk-fill restorations



             References:

             1.   Hench LL. Bioactive ceramics. Ann N Y Acad Sci. 1988;523(1):54-71.
                  [PubMed] Google Scholar(554) Scopus(265)
             2.   Hench LL. The story of Bioglass. J Mater Sci Mater Med. 2006;17(11):967-978
                  [PubMed] Google Scholar(1479) Scopus(1031)
             3.   ADA. ACE Panel Report Bioactive Materials. ADA; 2018.
                  https://www.ada.org/~/media/ADA/Science%20and%20Research/Files/ACE_Panel_Report_Bioactive_Materials_Q2_2018.pdf?la=en
             4.   Vallittu PK, Boccaccini AR, Hupa L, Watts DC. Bioactive dental materials-Do they exist and what does bioactivity mean? Dent Mater. 2018;34(5):693-694.
                  [PubMed] Google Scholar(6) Scopus(4)
             5.   ISO 23317. Implants for surgery - In vitro evaluation for apatite-forming ability of implant materials. Geneva: International Organization for
                  Standardization;2014.
             6.   Goldberg M, Schmalz G. Toward a strategic plan for pulp healing: from repair to regeneration. Clin Oral Investig. 2011;15(1):1-2.
                  [PubMed] Google Scholar(8) Scopus(5)




             					                                                                        DOI: https://doi.org/10.25241/stomaeduj.2018.5(4).edit.1




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