Prosthesis, Vol. 6, Pages 1118-1132: Survival of Chairside Posterior Single Crowns Made from InCoris TZI Zirconia—A Retrospective Analysis up to 10 Years
Prosthesis doi: 10.3390/prosthesis6050081
Authors: Julius Jules Neuhöffer Lea Stoilov Norbert Enkling Helmut Stark Dominik Kraus Milan Stoilov
Objective: The aim of the present study was to evaluate the long-term clinical survival and success of chairside-fabricated single-tooth monolithic zirconia restorations on posterior teeth using the speed sintering process. Materials and Methods: Between 2012 and 2022, 250 single-tooth crowns were fabricated for 193 patients using the CEREC® chairside workflow. Restorations were fabricated from monolithic 3Y-TZP zirconia (InCoris TZI, Dentsply Sirona©, Bensheim, Germany) as full-contour crowns. The same clinician performed all procedures. Luting was performed using self-adhesive resin-based cements or glass ionomer cement. Retrospective analysis was conducted, defining survival as crowns still in function regardless of any interventions, and success as crowns that remained functional without the need for intervention. Statistical analysis was performed using Kaplan–Meier analysis, considering “refabrication” and “intervention” as endpoints. Results: Of the 250 crowns, a total of 162 (64.8%) crowns showed success. Over the whole observation period, 44 crowns (17.6%) required refabrication, and 88 (35.2%) required intervention. Mean survival without refabrication was 7.43 years, with a 5- and 7.5-year survival of 86.9% and 76.6%. The mean survival without intervention was 6.5 years, with a 5- and 7.5-year survival of 70.8% and 59.9%. Conclusions: Under appropriate technical conditions, chairside-fabricated 3Y-TZP zirconia single-tooth crowns represent a viable fabrication method. Neither the cementation mode nor the crown position—whether on premolars or molars—significantly impacted the survival rates.