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Natural Sciences, Stomotology, 2026

SURVIVAL AND LONGEVITY: COMPARISON BETWEEN ROOT CANAL TREATED TEETH RETAINED WITH PROSTHODONTIC RESTORATIONS AND DENTAL IMPLANTS

This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Submitted: 2026-04-08
CC BY-NC 4.0 This work is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution–NonCommercial International License (CC BY-NC 4.0).

Abstract

Background: The clinical decision between retaining a compromised tooth via root canal treatment (RCT) and
prosthodontic restoration or extracting it and placing a dental implant remains a central dilemma in modern dentistry.
Both treatment modalities have high reported success, but long-term comparative data on survival and complication
profiles from matched cohorts are essential for evidence-based practice.
Methods: Using data collected from a university dentistry clinic’s patient record from 2010 to 2022, researchers ran a
retrospective cohort analysis. There were a total of 518 patients who were randomly assigned to one of two groups. One group received a single-tooth implant and crown to replace a missing tooth, while the other group received
endodontically treated teeth restored with a post-and-core and a crown. The main result was whether or not the tooth or implant remained in place. Surviving without any technical or biological issues was the secondary goal. A p-value of
less than 0.05 was used to establish statistical significance when data were examined using log-rank tests and KaplanMeier survival analysis.
Results: As a whole, the duration of follow-up was 9.8 ± 1.3 years. There was no statistically significant difference
between the RCT group’s 93.7% ± 1.8% 10-year cumulative survival rate and the Implant group’s 96.2% ± 1.5% survival rate (p=0.11). Having said that, the 10-year success rates showed a notable disparity. The success rate of the Implant group, at 91.6% ± 2.1% (p=0.02), was significantly higher than the RCT group’s 84.3% ± 2.9%.The primary reasons for failure in the RCT group were non-restorable tooth fracture (56.3% of failures) and endodontic pathosis (31.3%). In the Implant group, prosthetic complications like screw loosening or abutment fracture (45.0% of complications) were more common, while peri-implantitis accounted for 20.0% of failures.
Conclusion: Both RCT with prosthodontic restoration and single-tooth implants offer excellent and comparable longterm survival rates. However, dental implants demonstrate a higher 10-year success rate, characterized by a different profile of complications that are often more prosthetic and manageable in nature compared to the more catastrophic biological failures associated with RCT-treated teeth. This distinction is critical for informed consent and clinical decision-making.

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