Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3139520 The Journal of the American Dental Association 2008 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

ABSTRACTBackgroundThe objective of this article was to review systematically the clinical trials of casein derivatives (specifically casein phosphopeptide–amorphous calcium phosphate [CPP-ACP] complex) used in dentistry.Types of Studies ReviewedThe authors included clinical studies that examined the efficacy of casein derivatives in dentistry. They excluded in vitro studies, case series, case reports, letters to editors (not containing primary data), editorials, review articles and commentaries, but read them to identify any potential studies.ResultsThe authors searched 98 articles for relevance, determined according to title, abstract and full text, resulting in a yield of 12 original studies. Nine were clinical trials that focused on caries prevention, seven of which showed that CPP-ACP (as found in sugar-free pellet or slab chewing gum, lozenges, milk or mouthrinse) was effective in preventing dental caries by remineralizing subsurface carious lesions in situ in a dose-response fashion. One was a clinical trial with conflicting results regarding the effect of CPP-ACP on the regression of white-spot lesions; one was a survey of the relief of dry-mouth symptoms; and one was an uncontrolled clinical study that showed the lack of effectiveness and lack of short-term therapeutic effect in treating dentin hypersensitivity.Clinical ImplicationsThe quantity and quality of clinical trial evidence are insufficient to make conclusions regarding the long-term effectiveness of casein derivatives, specifically CPP-ACP, in preventing caries in vivo and treating dentin hypersensitivity or dry mouth.

Related Topics
Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Dentistry, Oral Surgery and Medicine
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