Abstract
Objectives
This manuscript presents a systematic review of the clinicopathologic features and outcomes of conservative surgical treatments for nonsyndromic odontogenic keratocysts (OKCs) and assesses the recurrence rates through a meta-analysis, in order to indicate the best conservative approach.
Materials and methods
PRISMA guidelines for systematic reviews were followed, and the protocol was registered (PROSPERO/Nr.: CRD42017060964). An electronic search was conducted using the PubMed/MEDLINE, Science Direct, Web of Science, Scopus, and The Cochrane Library databases, and relevant articles were selected based on specific inclusion criteria. The PICOS criteria (Population: nonsyndromic patients of any age with OKC, with histopathological diagnosis and minimum follow-up of 12 months; Intervention and Comparison: marsupialization or decompression with or without enucleation, and enucleation alone; Outcome: recurrence rates; Study design: clinical trials, controlled trials, retrospective studies, and case series containing at least 10 cases of OKC) were employed. A pooled odds ratio (OR) was computed through the Mantel-Haenszel test (M-H) with 95% confidence intervals (CI).
Results
One thousand nine hundred OKCs were analyzed; the age of the patients varied from 6 to 90 years (mean of 38.6 years); a male to female ratio of 1.57:1 was observed; 74.5% of the lesions occurred in the mandible; 75.7% of OKCs were unilocular; the association with impacted tooth was reported for 344 OKCs; and the mean follow-up was 60.1 months. One thousand three hundred thirty-one OKCs were treated by conservative surgical treatments, and 261 cases (19.8%) presented recurrence. Nonetheless, minor total recurrence rates were observed after decompression followed by enucleation (11.9%) and marsupialization followed by enucleation (17.8%). In contrast, enucleation alone showed a total recurrence rate of 20.8%.
Conclusion
The results suggest a significant superiority of success for OKC treatments that use decompression followed by enucleation, instead of an initial enucleation (M-H, OR = 0.48; 95% CI = 0.22 to 1.08; P = 0.0163).
Clinical relevance
No consensus exists concerning the best management for OKCs. More aggressive treatments (ostectomy, resection, or use of adjunctive therapies like Carnoy's solution and liquid nitrogen) can have many disadvantages and risks. Therefore, it is necessary to identify the conservative approach for OKCs that results in a lower recurrence rate.
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