Secondary Prevention of Dental Caries
Secondary prevention of dental caries is the early detection of caries and the arrest or reversal of lesions before they progress to cavitation and require restoration. It rests on the modern view of caries as a dynamic, reversible process: a lesion identified early can be remineralised or stabilised rather than drilled and filled.
Definition
Secondary prevention of dental caries is the early detection and non-operative or minimally invasive management of incipient carious lesions, aimed at arresting or reversing them before they progress to cavitation, based on the understanding of caries as a dynamic and reversible disease.
Scope
This topic covers what secondary prevention means for caries - early lesion detection, risk assessment, and non-operative or minimally invasive management to halt progression. It summarises the rationale and evidence as a reference. It does not give diagnostic protocols, restorative procedures, or individualised treatment or dosing advice.
Key concepts
- Early lesion detection and screening
- Caries as a reversible process
- Remineralisation of non-cavitated lesions
- Non-operative / minimally invasive management
- Caries risk assessment
- The de- and remineralisation balance
Mechanisms
Secondary prevention exploits the reversibility of early caries. Before a lesion cavitates, subsurface demineralisation can be halted or reversed by tipping the de- and remineralisation balance back toward mineral gain - chiefly through fluoride, reduced sugar frequency, and biofilm control. Detecting white-spot and other non-cavitated lesions early, and assessing the patient's caries risk, allows such lesions to be managed without surgical intervention, preserving tooth structure. The same logic positions early management on the continuum between primary prevention and operative restoration.
Clinical relevance
The shift toward early detection and non-operative management reflects the understanding of caries as a dynamic disease and is central to minimally invasive and preventive dentistry. This entry describes the concept and its evidence in general terms; it is educational and is not a basis for individual diagnosis, treatment selection, or dosing.
History
Secondary prevention of caries grew out of the reconceptualisation of the disease in the late twentieth century. As evidence accumulated that early lesions could remineralise, dentistry moved away from the traditional view that any detected caries warranted restoration, toward early detection, risk assessment, and the non-operative management of non-cavitated lesions - an approach summarised in the idea of caries as a continuum and a dynamic disease process.
Debates
- When does an early lesion warrant restoration?
- Deciding the threshold at which a detected lesion should be managed non-operatively versus restored remains a judgement, balancing the reversibility of early caries against the risk of progression, and depends on lesion activity and patient caries risk.
Key figures
- John Featherstone
- Nigel Pitts
- Robert Selwitz
- Amid Ismail
Related topics
Seminal works
- featherstone-2004
- pitts-2017
- selwitz-2007
Frequently asked questions
- Can early dental caries be reversed?
- Non-cavitated early lesions, such as white spots, can often be arrested or remineralised rather than restored, because caries is a dynamic process in which the balance between demineralisation and remineralisation can be shifted back toward mineral gain with fluoride, reduced sugar frequency, and biofilm control.
- How does secondary prevention differ from primary prevention?
- Primary prevention keeps caries from starting in sound teeth, while secondary prevention focuses on detecting lesions that have already begun and arresting or reversing them before they cavitate and need restoration.