Efficacy of the additional use of subgingival air-polishing with erythritol powder in the treatment of periodontitis patients: a randomized controlled clinical trial. Part II: effect on sub-gingival microbiome
Clinical Oral Investigations (2022)
Abstract
Objectives: To date, scarce evidence exists around the application of subgingival air-polishing during treatment of severe periodontitis. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect on the health-related and periodontitis-related subgingival microbiome of air-polishing during non-surgical treatment of deep bleeding pockets in stage III–IV periodontitis patients. Materials and methods: Forty patients with stage III–IV periodontitis were selected, and pockets with probing depth (PD) 5–9 mm and bleeding on probing were selected as experimental sites. All patients underwent a full-mouth session of erythritol powder supragingival air-polishing and ultrasonic instrumentation. Test group received additional subgingival air-polishing at experimental sites. Subgingival microbial samples were taken from the maxillary experimental site showing the deepest PD at baseline. Primary outcome of the first part of the present study was the 3-month change in the number of experimental sites. Additional analysis of periodontal pathogens and other sub-gingival plaque bacteria sampled at one experimental site at baseline and 3 months following treatment was performed through a real-time quantitative PCR microarray. Results: In the test group, a statistical increase of some health-related species was observed (Abiotropha defectiva, Capnocytophaga sputigena, and Lautropia mirabilis), together with the decrease of pathogens such as Actinomyces israelii, Catonella morbi, Filifactor alocis, Porphyromonas endodontalis, Selenomonas sputigena, Tannerella forsythia, Treponema denticola, and Treponema socranskii. In the control group, statistical significance was found only in the decrease of Filifactor alocis, Tannerella forsythia, and Treponema socranskii. Conclusions: The addition of erythritol-chlorhexidine powder seems to cause a shift of the periodontal microbiome toward a more eubiotic condition compared to a conventional treatment.
Keywords
Citazione
Mensi M, Caselli E, D'Accolti M, Soffritti I, Farina R, Scotti E, Guarnelli ME, Fabbri C, Garzetti G, Marchetti S, Sordillo A, Trombelli L. Efficacy of the additional use of subgingival air-polishing with erythritol powder in the treatment of periodontitis patients: a randomized controlled clinical trial. Part II: effect on sub-gingival microbiome. Clinical Oral Investigations. 2022. doi: 10.1007/s00784-022-04811-4
Study Highlights
This RCT (Part II of a two-part study) evaluated microbiological effects of subgingival air-polishing with erythritol+chlorhexidine powder in stage III–IV periodontitis patients (n=40, 20/group).
Key findings in Test group (GBT + subgingival air-polishing):
- Health-related species increased: Abiotropha defectiva, Capnocytophaga sputigena, Lautropia mirabilis (all p<0.05)
- Pathogens decreased: T. forsythia, T. denticola, T. socranskii, F. alocis, P. endodontalis, C. morbi, S. sputigena, A. israelii (all p<0.05)
Control group (ultrasonic only):
- Only 3 pathogens significantly decreased: F. alocis, T. forsythia, T. socranskii
Subgroup observations:
- Better microbiome shift in females and non-smokers
- Pockets <8mm responded better than deeper pockets
- Single-rooted teeth showed more significant shifts
Clinical relevance: Subgingival air-polishing with erythritol+CHX promotes a shift toward eubiotic microbiome beyond what ultrasonic debridement alone achieves, though Part I showed no significant clinical difference in pocket closure at 3 months.