Maxillary Sinus Floor Augmentation With Different Grafting Materials

February 7, 2021 updated by: Thomas Starch-Jensen, Aalborg University Hospital

Maxillary Sinus Floor Augmentation With Autogenous Bone Graft Alone or in Combination With Symbios Biphasic Bone Graft Material or Symbios Xenograft Granules. A Randomized Controlled Trial

Implant placement in the posterior maxilla is compromised due to atrophy of the alveolar process and maxillary sinus pneumatisation. Bone augmentation is frequently necessary before or in conjunction with implant placement. The most commonly used method to augment the posterior maxillary involves maxillary sinus floor augmentation (MSFA) with autogenous bone graft or bone substitute. Autogenous bone graft harvesting is associated with risk of donor site morbidity and unpredictable resorption of graft. Thus, bone substitutes alone or in combination with autogenous bone are used increasingly to simplify the surgical procedure.

Symbios biphasic biomaterial is a resorbable inorganic bone forming material derived from red algae consisting of 20% hydroxylapatite and 80% β-tricalciumphosphate with osteoconductive properties. Histologic and radiographic examinations indicate that β-tricalciumphosphate is slowly resorbed and replaced with bone. MSFA with β-tricalciumphosphate alone or in combination with autogenous bone or other bone substitutes have demonstrated high implant survival and new bone.

Symbios xenograft granules is a porcine bone mineral with osteoconductive properties. Histologic and radiographic examinations indicate that xenograft is a non-resorbable graft material. MSFA with xenograft alone or in combination with autogenous bone have shown high implant survival and new bone.

The objective is to test the H0-hypothesis of no difference in implant outcome after MSFA with autogenous bone graft or in combination with Symbios biphasic biomaterial or Symbios xenograft. 60 consecutively healthy patients with a missing posterior maxillary tooth/teeth will be randomly allocated to: 1) MSFA with autogenous bone graft, 2) MSFA with mixture of 50% autogenous bone graft and 50% Symbios biphasic biomaterial 3) MSFA with mixture of 50% autogenous bone graft and 50% Symbios xenograft. Implants will be inserted simultaneously with MSFA. Clinical and/or radiographical evaluation using periapical radiographs and Cone Beam Computer Tomography will be performed preoperatively, immediate postoperatively, before abutment connection, after prosthetic rehabilitation, and after one year to assess the treatment outcome and volumetric changes of the augmented area. Outcome include survival of suprastructures and implants, volumetric stability of graft, peri-implant marginal bone level, oral health related quality of life, and complications.

Study Overview

Detailed Description

Maxillary sinus floor augmentation (MSFA) is the most frequently used method to enhance the alveolar bone of the posterior maxilla before or in conjunction with implant placement. Autogenous bone is considered as the preferred graft material due to its osteoinductive, osteogenic and osteoconductive characteristics. However, autogenous bone grafts is associated with risk of donor site morbidity and unpredictable graft resorption. Hence, various bone substitutes are used increasingly to simplify the surgical procedure by diminishing the need for bone harvesting. From a clinical and patient perspective, it would be an advantage, if autogenous bone grafts could partially or totally be replaced with bone substitutes.

Symbios xenograft is a new porcine bone mineral characterized as an anorganic bone matrix with an interconnecting macro- and microscopic pore structure that supports formation and in-growth of new bone. Porcine xenograft have previously been used for various augmentation procedures disclosing new bone formation. Studies comparing autogenous bone graft with porcine bone alone or a mixture of autogenous bone and porcine bone have demonstrated high implant survival and new bone.

Synthetic biomaterials including calcium phosphate, calcium sulphate, polymers and bioactive glass represent a large group of inorganic diverse biomaterials with variating structures, chemical composition and physical properties. Symbios biphasic biomaterials is a resorbable inorganic bone forming material derived from red algae consisting of 20% hydroxylapatite and 80% β-tricalciumphosphate. Studies assessing MSFA with β-tricalciumphosphate have demonstrated that it is a safe grafting material with osteoconductive properties. Histologic and radiographic examinations indicate that β-tricalciumphosphate is slowly resorbed and replaced with bone. MSFA with β-tricalciumphosphate alone or in combination with autogenous bone or other bone substitutes have demonstrated high implant survival and new bone.

The study purpose is to increase our knowledge about MSFA with autogenous bone alone or in combination with Symbios biphasic biomaterials or Symbios xenograft granules and to simplified the procedure. Evaluation will include survival of suprastructures and implants, peri-implant marginal bone level, volumetrical stability of the graft and complications after an observation period of one year. Furthermore, oral health related quality of life, using OHIP-14 self-administrated and patient satisfaction using visual analogue scales (VAS), will be evaluated.

The objective is to test the H0 hypothesis of no differences in 1) Survival of suprastructures and implants, 2) Volumetrical stability of the graft, 3)Peri-implant marginal bone level, 4) Implantat stability quotient, 5) Patient-reported outcome measures, and 6) Biologic and technical complications.

Materials and methods Study population 60 consecutively healthy patients with a missing posterior maxillary tooth will be included and randomly allocated to: 1) MSFA with autogenous bone graft alone (control group), 2) mixture of 50% autogenous bone graft and 50% Symbios biphasic biomaterial (test group I), and 3) mixture of 50% autogenous bone and 50% Symbios xenograft (test group II). The study will be conducted at the Departments of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Aalborg University Hospital, Denmark and Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery and Oral Medicine, Malmö University, Malmö, Sweden.

Patients will be included to the study by using a Facebook posting through the University's Facebook page, the local dental association website or patients that are referred to the Departments for treatment of one or more missing teeth in the posterior maxilla. All patients will be offered participation in the study, if they meet the inclusion criteria. Prior to patients' first visit, they will receive a notice informing about their rights and informed consent form will be signed.

Inclusion criteria involves 1) >20 years, 2) Missing one or more posterior maxillary teeth, 3) Residual bone height of the maxillary alveolar process between 3 to 7 mm, 4) Width of the alveolar process ≥6.5 mm and, 5) Mandibular occluding teeth. Exclusion criteria involves 1) Contraindications to implant therapy, 2) Full mouth plaque score >25%, 3) Progressive marginal periodontitis, 4) Acute infection in the area intended for implant placement, 5)Parafunction, bruxism, or clenching, 6) Psychiatric problems or unrealistic expectations, 7) Heavy tobacco use, define as >10 cigarettes per day, and 8)Pregnancy.

The study is approved by the local ethical Committee on Health Research and the Danish Data Protection Agency and The Ethical Review Board in Lund, Sweden' and will be performed according to the Declaration of Helsinki on clinical research. All patients will be given verbal and written information about the study at a clinical visit prior to surgery. Written informed consent is mandatory for inclusion in the study and will be obtained by the investigators.

The initial examination of the patient will include 1) Clinical examination and screening of the parodontal health, 2) Radiographical examination of the residual alveolar bone height based on CBCT and Orthopantomography, and 3) Patient will fill out the OHIP-14 questionnaire.

The surgical procedure will be performed in local anesthesia. Implant installation and fabrication of the subsequently prosthetic solution will be performed according to manufacturer's recommendations. The maxillary sinus wall is exposed by an intraoral marginal incision from tuber maxillae to the first premolar with a vertical releasing incision. A 1 x 1 cm window to the maxillary sinus is created with metal and diamond burrs maintaining an intact Schneiderian membrane. The Schneiderian membrane is elevated from the sinus floor as well as the lateral sinus wall and displaced dorsocranially with blunt dissector. An implant bed is successively prepared on the top of the alveolar crest following manufactory's recommendations at 1500 rpm. A straight implant (ASTRA TECH Implant System EV 3.6, 4.2 or 4.8, 13 mm) is inserted with a cover screw. The implant stability quotient is measured for all inserted implants. A sealed randomization envelope is opened in order to allocate the patient to: 1) MSFA with particulated autogenous bone graft alone (control group), 2) a mixture of 50% particulated autogenous bone graft and 50% Symbios biphasic bone graft material (1.0 mm to 2.0 mm) (test group I), 3) a mixture of 50% particulated autogenous bone graft and 50% Symbios xenograft granules (1.0 mm to 2.0 mm) (test group II). The autogenous bone graft is harvested with a curved SafeScraper from the zygomatic buttress area. Specially prepared stainless steel cups (0.5 cm3 and 1 cm3) are used to estimate 1 cm3 of graft material for each inserted implant. The graft material will be soaked in autogenous blood from the surgical site until use. The sinus around the implant is packed with 1 cm3 graft material. The created window to the maxillary sinus is covered by a Symbios Collagen Membrane 15 x 20 mm. Periosteum and mucosa are sutured with Vicryl 4-0. Minor perforations of sinus membrane will be covered with a Symbios Collagen Membrane. If the sinus membrane is largely perforated the procedure will be cancelled, and the patient will be withdrawn from the study. No provisional restoration is inserted during the healing period. After six months of healing, the inserted implants in the three treatment groups are exposed via a crestal incision. Mucosa and periosteum are elevated and the cover screw is removed. The implant stability quotient is measured for all inserted implants. The implant is rinsed with saline and a prefabricated healing abutment is placed. The implants are manually tested for mobility and osseointegration by percussion. Mucosa is adapted and sutured with Vicryl 4-0. The prosthetic restoration will be initiated three weeks after the healing abutment has been placed.

Prosthetic restoration will include an individualized abutment and a fixed restoration performed by experienced prosthodontists with extensive clinical experience with implant-based prosthetics.

Patients will be scheduled for a postoperative clinical examination at baseline, and one year after loading. The following parameters will be recorded at each visit 1) Plaque and gingival index, probing pocket depth, and probing attachment level, 2) Oral health related quality of life - OHIP-14 and 3) Patient satisfaction (VAS).

Radiographical evaluation will include seven sets of periapical radiographs and CBCT obtained preoperatively, immediately postoperatively, after abutment connection, at baseline and one year after loading. To provide blinding of the radiographical evaluation, the CBCT-scans are coded. Volumetrical changes of the grafts are estimated by point counting and the method described originally by Cavalieri. To obtain an equivalent starting point for the systematic uniform random sampling of the CBCT-scans images involving the maxillary sinus, all images from the neighboring teeth to the implant bed are selected. The first CBCT images after the distal surface of the anterior neighboring tooth is sampled randomly using a random number table for each maxillary sinus. Every second CBCT image is selected to ensure an equal mutual distance between the selected 5-10 images. The original outline of the maxillary sinus before implant installation is recorded and superimposed on the corresponding images. A point grid test system is superimposed at random on all images, allowing 100-200 points to hit the graft of each maxillary sinus. The numbers of intersections over the graft are counted on each selected image. Cavalieri volume estimation principle is used to estimate the total volume of the graft.

V = t x a(p) x ΣP

Where V is volume, t is the distance between the sampled images, a(p) is the area associated with each test point corrected for magnification and ΣP is the total number of points hitting the graft.

Peri-implant marginal bone changes are evaluated by linear measurements on digital periapical radiographs and will be done on radiographs obtained at implant placement, baseline, and one year after loading. The distance from the implant-abutment connection to the marginal bone level will be measured mesially and distally parallel with the long-axis of the implant.

Data management and analysis including calculation of descriptive statistics are done using STATA. A power calculation are based on differences in marginal bone level changes preformed in a previous study involving replacement of a single tooth with 2 different protocols of implant treatment. The calculation is based on the observed changes in marginal bone level from insertion of the implant to abutment connection (a change of 0.65 mm and a standard deviation of 0.65), 17 patients in each group reaches a power of 97% at the 5%-level. With 15% to cover drop-outs, each treatment group should include 20 patients. The statistical evaluation is performed by analysis of variance. Scheffe´s multiple comparison test is used post hoc to determine the relative effect of the various graft types. Level of significance is 0.05.

Study Type

Interventional

Enrollment (Actual)

60

Phase

  • Not Applicable

Contacts and Locations

This section provides the contact details for those conducting the study, and information on where this study is being conducted.

Study Locations

    • Nordjylland
      • Aalborg, Nordjylland, Denmark, 9000
        • Aalborg University Hospital

Participation Criteria

Researchers look for people who fit a certain description, called eligibility criteria. Some examples of these criteria are a person's general health condition or prior treatments.

Eligibility Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study

20 years and older (Adult, Older Adult)

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Genders Eligible for Study

All

Description

Inclusion Criteria:

  • >20 years
  • Missing one or more posterior maxillary teeth
  • Residual bone height of the maxillary alveolar process between 3 to 7 mm
  • Width of the alveolar process ≥6.5 mm.
  • Mandibular occluding teeth

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Contraindications to implant therapy
  • Full mouth plaque score >25%
  • Progressive marginal periodontitis
  • Acute infection in the area intended for implant placement
  • Parafunction, bruxism, or clenching
  • Psychiatric problems or unrealistic expectations
  • Heavy tobacco use, define as >10 cigarettes per day
  • Pregnancy

Study Plan

This section provides details of the study plan, including how the study is designed and what the study is measuring.

How is the study designed?

Design Details

  • Primary Purpose: Treatment
  • Allocation: Randomized
  • Interventional Model: Parallel Assignment
  • Masking: Single

Arms and Interventions

Participant Group / Arm
Intervention / Treatment
Active Comparator: Autogenous bone graft alone
Maxillary sinus floor augmentation with particulated autogenous bone graft alone from the zygomatic buttress area and simultaneously implant placement
The sinus membrane of the maxillary sinus is elevated to create a space for the grafting material and placement of dental implants in the posterior maxilla
Experimental: Mixture of 50% autogenous bone graft and 50% Symbios biphasic biomaterial
Maxillary sinus floor augmentation with a mixture of 50% particulated autogenous bone graft from the zygomatic buttress area and 50% Symbios biphasic bone graft material (Biomaterial, 1.0 mm to 2.0 mm) with simultaneously implant placementand
The sinus membrane of the maxillary sinus is elevated to create a space for the grafting material and placement of dental implants in the posterior maxilla
Experimental: Mixture of 50% autogenous bone graft and 50% Symbios xenograft granules
Maxillary sinus floor augmentation with a mixture of 50% particulated autogenous bone graft from the zygomatic buttress area and 50% Symbios xenograft granules (Biomaterial, 1.0 mm to 2.0 mm) with simultaneously implant placement
The sinus membrane of the maxillary sinus is elevated to create a space for the grafting material and placement of dental implants in the posterior maxilla

What is the study measuring?

Primary Outcome Measures

Outcome Measure
Measure Description
Time Frame
Survival of suprastructures
Time Frame: One year of implant loading
Loss of suprastructures is defined as a total loss because of a non-treatable mechanical/or biological complication
One year of implant loading
Survival of implants
Time Frame: One year of implant loading
Loss of implants is defined as removal of a non-integrated implant, mobility of previously clinical osseointegrated implant, and removal of non-mobile implants due to progressive peri-implant marginal bone loss and infection
One year of implant loading

Secondary Outcome Measures

Outcome Measure
Measure Description
Time Frame
Volumetric changes of the graft material
Time Frame: One year of implant loading
Radiographic measurement of the augmented area
One year of implant loading
Peri-implant marginal bone level
Time Frame: One year of functional loading
Radiographic assessment of the marginal bone loss around the implants
One year of functional loading
Patient-reported outcome measures
Time Frame: One year of functional implant loading
Oral Health Impact Profile-14 (OHIP-14) questionnaire is used to assess oral health-related quality of life (OHRQoL). OHIP-14 is organized into seven dimensions including functional limitation, physical discomfort, psychological discomfort, physical disability, psychological disability, social disability and handicap. Two items are used to measure each dimension and consequently the questionnaire consists of 14 items. Response format is as follows: Very often = 4; Fairly often or many times = 3; Occasionally = 2; Hardly ever or nearly never = 1; Never/I don´t know = 0. OHIP-14 scale ranged from 0 to 56 and dimension score ranged from 0 to 8. Values of the 14 items and each dimension were summed to calculate the OHIP-14 severity score. Higher scores indicating poorer OHRQoL. Recovery is examined by a 100mm (0 = minimal to 100 = maximum) visual analogue scale assessing pain, social isolation, working isolation, eating ability, speaking ability and sleep impairment.
One year of functional implant loading
Complications
Time Frame: One year of functional implant loading
Loss of implants or grafting material due to infection
One year of functional implant loading

Collaborators and Investigators

This is where you will find people and organizations involved with this study.

Study record dates

These dates track the progress of study record and summary results submissions to ClinicalTrials.gov. Study records and reported results are reviewed by the National Library of Medicine (NLM) to make sure they meet specific quality control standards before being posted on the public website.

Study Major Dates

Study Start (Actual)

January 1, 2020

Primary Completion (Actual)

January 1, 2021

Study Completion (Actual)

January 20, 2021

Study Registration Dates

First Submitted

January 21, 2021

First Submitted That Met QC Criteria

February 7, 2021

First Posted (Actual)

February 11, 2021

Study Record Updates

Last Update Posted (Actual)

February 11, 2021

Last Update Submitted That Met QC Criteria

February 7, 2021

Last Verified

February 1, 2021

More Information

Terms related to this study

Plan for Individual participant data (IPD)

Plan to Share Individual Participant Data (IPD)?

No

IPD Plan Description

Individual participant data will not be shared. Data will be crypted and only referable for the primary investigator

Drug and device information, study documents

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated drug product

No

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated device product

No

This information was retrieved directly from the website clinicaltrials.gov without any changes. If you have any requests to change, remove or update your study details, please contact register@clinicaltrials.gov. As soon as a change is implemented on clinicaltrials.gov, this will be updated automatically on our website as well.

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