November 04, 2025

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Intraoral Scanners Detect Occlusal Caries As Accurately As Clinical Examination

Intraoral Scanners Study

Intraoral Scanners as a Diagnostic Tool for Occlusal Caries

Intraoral scanners can be applied as a diagnostic tool for detecting occlusal caries, with a diagnostic accuracy similar to that of clinical examination, suggests a new study published in the Journal of Dentistry.

A study was done to evaluate the diagnostic performance of visual caries assessment on 3D dental models obtained using an intraoral scanner and to compare it with the performance of the clinical visual inspection.

Study Details

Fifty-three permanent posterior teeth scheduled for extraction were randomly selected and included in this study. One to three independent examination sites on the occlusal surface of each tooth were clinically inspected using International Caries Detection and Assessment System (ICDAS) criteria. Afterwards, the examined teeth were scanned intraorally with a 3D intraoral scanner (TRIOS 4, 3Shape TRIOS A/S, Copenhagen, Denmark) using white and blue-violet light (415 nm wavelength) to capture the colour and fluorescence signal from the tissues.

Six months after the clinical examination, the same examiner conducted the on-screen assessment of the obtained 3D digital dental models at the selected examination sites using modified ICDAS criteria. Both tooth colour and fluorescence texture with high resolution were assessed. Lastly, an independent examiner conducted the histological examination of all teeth after extraction. Using histology as the reference test, Sensitivity (SE), Specificity (SP), Accuracy (ACC), area under the Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curve, and Spearman's correlation coefficient were calculated for the clinical and on-screen ICDAS assessments.

Results

  • The ACC values of the evaluated methods varied between 0.59-0.79 for initial caries lesions and 0.77-0.99 for moderate-extensive caries lesions.
  • Apart from SE values corresponding to caries in the inner half of enamel, no significant difference was observed between clinical visual inspection and on-screen assessment.
  • No difference was found in the assessment of 3D models with tooth colour alone or supplemented with fluorescence for all the evaluated diagnostic measures.
  • On-screen visual assessment of 3D digital dental models with tooth colour or fluorescence showed a similar diagnostic performance to the clinical visual inspection when detecting and classifying occlusal caries lesions on permanent teeth.

Reference

P. Ntovas, S. Michou, AR Benetti, A Bakhshandeh, K Ekstrand, C Rahiotis, A Kakaboura, Occlusal caries detection on 3D models obtained with an intraoral scanner. A validation study. Journal of Dentistry, Volume 131, 2023, 104457, ISSN 0300-5712, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jdent.2023.104457.

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