The global distribution of permanent canine hypodontia: A systematic review

Objective: To systematically review studies on canine agenesis prevalence in different populations and continents, based on the jaw, sex, location, and associated dental anomalies. Methods: Electronic and hand searches of English literature in PubMed, Web of Science, Scopus, OpenGrey, and Science Di...

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Main Authors: Sivarajan, Saritha, Mani, Shani Ann, John, Jacob, Fayed, Mona M. Salah, Kook, Yoon-Ah, Wey, Mang Chek
Format: Article
Published: Korean Association of Orthodontists 2021
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/28547/
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spelling my.um.eprints.285472022-08-15T06:26:08Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/28547/ The global distribution of permanent canine hypodontia: A systematic review Sivarajan, Saritha Mani, Shani Ann John, Jacob Fayed, Mona M. Salah Kook, Yoon-Ah Wey, Mang Chek RK Dentistry Objective: To systematically review studies on canine agenesis prevalence in different populations and continents, based on the jaw, sex, location, and associated dental anomalies. Methods: Electronic and hand searches of English literature in PubMed, Web of Science, Scopus, OpenGrey, and Science Direct were conducted, and the authors were contacted when necessary. Observational studies (population-based, hospital/clinic-based, and cross-sectional) were included. For study appraisal and synthesis, duplicate selection was performed independently by two reviewers. Study quality was assessed using a modified Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology checklist, with main outcome of prevalence of canine agenesis. Results: The global population prevalence of canine agenesis was 0.30% (0.0-4.7%), highest in Asia (0.54%), followed by Africa (0.33%), and the least in Europe and South America (0.19% in both continents). Canine agenesis was more common in the maxilla (88.57%), followed by both maxilla and mandible (8.57%), and the least common was mandible- only presentation (2.86%). The condition was more common in females (female:male ratio = 1.23), except in Asia (female:male ratio = 0.88) and Africa (female:male ratio = 1). In Asia, unilateral agenesis was almost twice as prevalent as bilateral, but in Europe, the bilateral form was more common. Conclusions: The overall prevalence of canine agenesis is 0.30%, with the highest prevalence in Asia, followed by Africa, Europe, and South America. The condition is more common in the maxilla than the mandible, and in females than males (except in Asia and Africa), with unilateral agenesis being more common in Asia and the bilateral form showing a greater prevalence in Europe. Korean Association of Orthodontists 2021-01 Article PeerReviewed Sivarajan, Saritha and Mani, Shani Ann and John, Jacob and Fayed, Mona M. Salah and Kook, Yoon-Ah and Wey, Mang Chek (2021) The global distribution of permanent canine hypodontia: A systematic review. Korean Journal of Orthodontics, 51 (1). pp. 55-74. ISSN 2234-7518, DOI https://doi.org/10.4041/kjod.2021.51.1.55 <https://doi.org/10.4041/kjod.2021.51.1.55>. 10.4041/kjod.2021.51.1.55
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic RK Dentistry
spellingShingle RK Dentistry
Sivarajan, Saritha
Mani, Shani Ann
John, Jacob
Fayed, Mona M. Salah
Kook, Yoon-Ah
Wey, Mang Chek
The global distribution of permanent canine hypodontia: A systematic review
description Objective: To systematically review studies on canine agenesis prevalence in different populations and continents, based on the jaw, sex, location, and associated dental anomalies. Methods: Electronic and hand searches of English literature in PubMed, Web of Science, Scopus, OpenGrey, and Science Direct were conducted, and the authors were contacted when necessary. Observational studies (population-based, hospital/clinic-based, and cross-sectional) were included. For study appraisal and synthesis, duplicate selection was performed independently by two reviewers. Study quality was assessed using a modified Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology checklist, with main outcome of prevalence of canine agenesis. Results: The global population prevalence of canine agenesis was 0.30% (0.0-4.7%), highest in Asia (0.54%), followed by Africa (0.33%), and the least in Europe and South America (0.19% in both continents). Canine agenesis was more common in the maxilla (88.57%), followed by both maxilla and mandible (8.57%), and the least common was mandible- only presentation (2.86%). The condition was more common in females (female:male ratio = 1.23), except in Asia (female:male ratio = 0.88) and Africa (female:male ratio = 1). In Asia, unilateral agenesis was almost twice as prevalent as bilateral, but in Europe, the bilateral form was more common. Conclusions: The overall prevalence of canine agenesis is 0.30%, with the highest prevalence in Asia, followed by Africa, Europe, and South America. The condition is more common in the maxilla than the mandible, and in females than males (except in Asia and Africa), with unilateral agenesis being more common in Asia and the bilateral form showing a greater prevalence in Europe.
format Article
author Sivarajan, Saritha
Mani, Shani Ann
John, Jacob
Fayed, Mona M. Salah
Kook, Yoon-Ah
Wey, Mang Chek
author_facet Sivarajan, Saritha
Mani, Shani Ann
John, Jacob
Fayed, Mona M. Salah
Kook, Yoon-Ah
Wey, Mang Chek
author_sort Sivarajan, Saritha
title The global distribution of permanent canine hypodontia: A systematic review
title_short The global distribution of permanent canine hypodontia: A systematic review
title_full The global distribution of permanent canine hypodontia: A systematic review
title_fullStr The global distribution of permanent canine hypodontia: A systematic review
title_full_unstemmed The global distribution of permanent canine hypodontia: A systematic review
title_sort global distribution of permanent canine hypodontia: a systematic review
publisher Korean Association of Orthodontists
publishDate 2021
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/28547/
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score 13.18916