Will dental monitoring change orthodontics? 6 MINUTE SUMMARY
Join me for a summary looking at remote monitoring in orthodontic clinical practice, and if it can improve, quicken and enhance orthodontic clinical practice. This podcast is based on an excellent webinar by Jonathan Sandler and Juan Carlos Varela, as part of the Angle-net webinar series. I discuss how Dental Monitoring works, the proposed advantages and a review of the emerging research on this innovation in orthodontics. What is Dental Monitoring? AI software which assesses occlusal and dental changes through a series of intra-oral photographs taken by the patient using their smartphone How does it work? Upload STL / digital study model Ai segmentation of teeth which maps digital study model to the photos Aligner fit analysis: Discrepancy between tooth surface and aligner fit Either proceed, continue wear or see clinician Fixed appliances Assess rate of movement and schedule appointment Other proposed benefits Oral hygiene assessment Breakages Retention changes What do patients think of it? Patients attitudes to remote monitoring 81% interested in reducing number of appointments due to telemonitoring – Dalessandri 2021 25% of patients found scans difficult to perform, with duration of scan 2-17 minutes Hansa 2020 Does it reduce appointments and make treatment quicker? Sangalli 2024 Decrease the number of in-office visits by 1.68–3.5 visits No difference in treatment duration No statistical reduction in emergency appointments Are treatment outcome better (aligners)? No difference in tooth movements Hansa 2021 No difference in number of refinements Hansa 2021 PAR changes – no difference in quality of outcomes Jarad Marks 2024 Is oral health better? DM reduced plaque scores Costi 2019 31% Improved hygiene Manzo white paper Other innovations with remote monitoring? Remote STL files Scan taken without patient attending the practice Scanbox Formulate STL file and fit aligner in surgery Is Dental Monitoring accurate? Ferlito 2022 80% repeatability from 2 scans 44.7% repeatability and reproducibility Discrepancy between scanbox and intra-oral scan varied between 0.5-1.9mm, angular measurements maximum error 8.9 degrees Conclusion 2-3 appointments less No difference in overall duration Some people struggle to use Accuracy and repeatability variable No difference in the quality of the outcome Areas which are of concern Unknown accuracy of occlusal assessments from a reliable retruded contact position Patient motivation maybe better delivered in person Ai environment cost 2-3% of energy used by data centres Other ways to reduce time? Diagnostic and treatment planning acumen Identify main aspect of malocclusion and address through efficient mechanics