At-home bleaching versus whitening toothpastes for treatment of tooth discoloration

a cost-effectiveness analysis

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DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/1678-7757-2023-0336

Keywords:

Cost-benefit analysis, Dentifrices, Toothpastes, Carbamide peroxide, Tooth bleaching

Abstract

Objectives: This study aimed to analyze the cost-effectiveness of whitening toothpastes and at-home bleaching for the treatment of tooth discoloration. Methodology: A cost-effectiveness economic analysis was conducted, and eight randomized clinical trials were selected based on the whitening agent product used: blue covarine dentifrices (BCD), hydrogen peroxide dentifrices (HPD), dentifrices without bleaching agents (CD, negative control), and 10% carbamide peroxide (CP10, positive control) for at-home bleaching. The consumer/patient perspective was adopted, macro-costing techniques were used and a decision tree model was performed considering the costs in the American and Brazilian markets. The color change evaluation (ΔE*ab) was used to calculate the effectiveness of tooth bleaching. A probabilistic analysis was performed using a Monte Carlo simulation and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios were obtained. Results: CP10 resulted in the highest cost-effectiveness compared to the use of dentifrices in both markets. In Brazil, HPD was more cost-effective than BCD and CD. In the US, the increased costs of HPD and BCD did not generate any whitening benefit compared to CD. Conclusions: CP10 was more cost-effective than BCD and HPD for tooth bleaching from the perspectives of the Brazilian and American markets. Decision-making should consider the use of CP10 for treating tooth discoloration.

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Published

2024-02-07 — Updated on 2024-02-07

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How to Cite

Santos, M. E. ., Silva, R. O. da, Cavalcanti, Y. W., & Meireles, S. S. (2024). At-home bleaching versus whitening toothpastes for treatment of tooth discoloration: a cost-effectiveness analysis. Journal of Applied Oral Science, 32, e20230336. https://doi.org/10.1590/1678-7757-2023-0336