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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2014 Apr 1.
Published in final edited form as: Community Dent Oral Epidemiol. 2012 Oct 5;41(2):10.1111/cdoe.12008. doi: 10.1111/cdoe.12008

Table 4.

Comparison of change between baseline and follow-up, by baseline level of invasiveness, after stratifying by DPBRN participation level

Full DPBRN participants Partial DPBRN participants
Baseline response to treatment scenario Response at follow-up was … Response at follow-up was …
… more-invasive … the same … less-invasive … more-invasive … the same … less-invasive
1. Defective composite restoration with cementum-dentin marginsa
No treatment/preventive only 50% (n=18) 50% (n=18) np 67% (n=8) 33% (n=4) np
Polish, re-surface, repair 25% (n=17) 66% (n=45) 9% (n=6) 36% (n=12) 55% (n=18) 9% (n=3)
Replace entire restoration np 47% (n=55) 53% (n=61) np 73% (n=96) 27% (n=36)
2. Defective composite restoration with enamel marginsa
No treatment/preventive only 59% (n=19) 41% (n=13) np 87% (n=13) 13% (n=2) np
Polish, re-surface, repair 15% (n=18) 70% (n=87) 15% (n=19) 23% (n=20) 67% (n=58) 10% (n=9)
Replace entire restoration np 44% (n=26) 56% (n=33) np 65% (n=46) 35% (n=25)
3. Defective amalgam restorationa
No treatment/preventive only 16% (n=16) 84% (n=87) np 33% (n=29) 67% (n=59) np
Polish, re-surface, repair 10% (n=4) 44% (n=18) 46% (n=19) 29% (n=4) 7% (n=1) 64% (n=9)
Replace entire restoration np 53% (n=36) 47% (n=32) np 56% (n=38) 44% (n=30)
4. Occlusal caries scenario 1b
No treatment/preventive only 18% (n=17) 82% (n=75) np 19% (n=8) 81% (n=35) np
Minimal intervention 8% (n=8) 37% (n=39) 56% (n=59) 14% (n=14) 40% (n=39) 45% (n=44)
Place complete restoration np 13% (n=2) 88% (n=14) np 61% (n=14) 39% (n=9)
5. Occlusal caries scenario 2b
No treatment/preventive only 17% (n=4) 83% (n=20) np 14% (n=1) 86% (n=6) np
Minimal intervention 20% (n=22) 56% (n=63) 24% (n=27) 27% (n=20) 52% (n=39) 21% (n=16)
Place complete restoration np 41% (n=27) 59% (n=39) np 60% (n=47) 40% (n=31)
6. Proximal caries scenarioc
Outer ½ of enamel np 67% (n=2) 33% (n=1) np 50% (n=2) 50% (n=2)
Inner ½ of enamel 6% (n=4) 57% (n=37) 37% (n=24) 1% (n=1) 76% (n=60) 23% (n=18)
Outer 1/3 of dentin 10% (n=12) 80% (n=94) 10% (n=12) 27% (n=23) 69% (n=58) 4% (n=3)
Middle 1/3 of dentin 38% (n=10) 62% (n=16) 0% (n=0) 100% (n=3) 0% (n=0) 0% (n=0)
Inner 1/3 of dentin 0% (n=0) 0% (n=0) np 100% (n=1) 0% (n=0) np

As in Table 3, This table shows results for each of the six clinical scenarios separately. This is necessary because the percentages of change vary for each scenario. The left column shows what the practitioner’s response for that scenario was at baseline. The three right-most columns show what that practitioner’s response for that same scenario was at follow-up, describing whether or not the follow-up response was more-invasive, less-invasive, or the same. This table shows results in Table 3, but after stratifying into two strata: full participants and partial participants. Percentages in some rows do not add to 100% due to rounding.

a

Response categories were: (1) no treatment or preventive treatment only; (2) polish, re-surface, or repair the restoration; and (3) replace the entire restoration. A “less-invasive” response meant moving to a category 1 response after having provided at baseline a response of category 2 or 3; or to a category 2 response after having provided at baseline a response of category 3. A “more-invasive” response meant moving to a category 3 response after having provided at baseline a response of category 1 or 2; or to a category 2 response after having provided at baseline a response of category 1.

b

Response categories were: (1) no treatment or preventive treatment only; (2) minimal intervention; and (3) complete restoration. A “less-invasive” response meant moving to a category 1 response after having provided at baseline a response of category 2 or 3; or to a category 2 response after having provided at baseline a response of category 3. A “more-invasive” response meant moving to a category 3 response after having provided at baseline a response of category 1 or 2; or to a category 2 response after having provided at baseline a response of category 1.

c

Response categories were to intervene surgically (i.e., restore the tooth) at this caries lesion depth: (1) outer half of enamel; (2) inner half of enamel; (3) outer one-third of dentin; (4) middle one-third of dentin; (5) inner one-third of dentin. A “less-invasive” response meant moving to a category with a lower number after having provided at baseline a category with a higher number. A “more-invasive” response meant moving to a category with a higher number after having provided at baseline a category with a lower number.

np: not possible because of the scale’s floor or ceiling effects

A multivariable regression of change score was done for each of the six scenarios; baseline response and participation level were the only covariates in each regression. The baseline response variable was statistically significant in each regression (p<0.001). Participation level was statistically significant in scenario 1 (p < 0.001), scenario 2 (p = 0.001), scenario 4 (p = 0.014), scenario 5 (p = 0.041), and scenario 6 (p=0.001). It was not significant for scenario 3 (p = 0.053).