TY - JOUR
T1 - The Global Periapical Health Study: A Big Data CBCT Analysis of Periapical Pathology across 54 Countries
AU - GPHS Research Group
AU - Martins, Jorge N.R.
AU - Martins, Jorge N.R.
AU - Ensinas, Pablo
AU - Hovhannisyan, Narine
AU - Chan, Francis
AU - Babayeva, Narin
AU - Berti, Luiza
AU - Antúnez, Marcia
AU - Gu, Yongchun
AU - Espriella, Catalina Mendez de la
AU - Gonzalez, Sheila Michel Burdiez
AU - Camacho, Juan Carlos Izquierdo
AU - Alkhawas, Moataz-Bellah A.M.
AU - Pimentel, Tiago
AU - Eglit, Alina
AU - Jinnah, Wajih
AU - Natsvlishvili, Tea
AU - Chaniotis, Antonis
AU - Benyőcs, Gergely
AU - Ragnarsson, Magnús F.
AU - Kottoor, Jojo
AU - Nekoofar, Mohammad
AU - Gonçalves, Nuno
AU - Shemesh, Avi
AU - Castagnola, Raffaella
AU - Tummala, Sriteja
AU - Yamada, Masashi
AU - Hammo, Mohammad
AU - Ongarova, Marzhan
AU - Maksimova, Arina
AU - Ounsi, Hani
AU - Šubina, Marija
AU - Khairallah, Alexandre
AU - Parolia, Abhishek
AU - Aguilar, Ruben Rosas
AU - Cassim, Imran
AU - Oderinu, Olabisi H.
AU - Nazeer, Muhammad Rizwan
AU - Heilborn, Carlos
AU - Nole, Christian
AU - Karaś, Bartlomiej
AU - Nicola, Sergiu
AU - Lipatova, Elena
AU - Alfawaz, Hussam
AU - Seedat, Hussein C.
AU - Chang, Seok Woo
AU - Gonzalez, Jose Antonio
AU - Wolf, Thomas Gerhard
AU - Kabtoleh, Alaa
AU - Arayasantiparb, Raweewan
PY - 2026/2/10
Y1 - 2026/2/10
N2 - Introduction Periapical pathology, a common outcome of pulpal infection or failed endodontic therapy, remains underexplored globally. Most studies are small-scale and based on two-dimensional radiographs. This study aimed to provide a standardized worldwide estimate of its prevalence using cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT). Methods A cross-sectional, multicenter study was conducted across 54 countries, each represented by one calibrated examiner. Examiners consecutively assessed 3,500 roots from pre-existing CBCT scans, yielding data from 189,000 roots (138,536 teeth) of 6,688 patients. A standardized protocol was applied using the CBCT periapical index to record lesion presence, tooth type, previous root canal treatment, and demographic variables. Only scans with voxel size ≤200 μm were included. Data were analyzed through meta-analysis and logistic regression model to evaluate factors associated with periapical pathology, with meta-regression assessing voxel size and field-of-view effects. Results At the patient level, periapical pathology affected 58.6% of individuals worldwide. Secondary tooth-level analysis showed a prevalence of 7.3%, ranging from 2.5% in Oceania to 9.6% in Africa. Maxillary teeth (9.3%) were more frequently affected than mandibular teeth (5.3%), with maxillary first molars showing the highest prevalence (18.6%). Prevalence increased with age, from 2.9% (≤20 years) to 10.5% (≥61 years). Endodontically treated teeth showed markedly higher prevalence of post-treatment periapical radiolucencies (44.3%) than untreated teeth (2.6%) (odds ratio = 21.6; confidence interval 19.1-23.1; P < .001). Voxel size and field-of-view did not influence outcomes. Conclusion Periapical pathology is highly prevalent worldwide, with notable regional and age-related differences. Endodontically treated teeth showed a disproportionately high prevalence of periapical pathology.
AB - Introduction Periapical pathology, a common outcome of pulpal infection or failed endodontic therapy, remains underexplored globally. Most studies are small-scale and based on two-dimensional radiographs. This study aimed to provide a standardized worldwide estimate of its prevalence using cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT). Methods A cross-sectional, multicenter study was conducted across 54 countries, each represented by one calibrated examiner. Examiners consecutively assessed 3,500 roots from pre-existing CBCT scans, yielding data from 189,000 roots (138,536 teeth) of 6,688 patients. A standardized protocol was applied using the CBCT periapical index to record lesion presence, tooth type, previous root canal treatment, and demographic variables. Only scans with voxel size ≤200 μm were included. Data were analyzed through meta-analysis and logistic regression model to evaluate factors associated with periapical pathology, with meta-regression assessing voxel size and field-of-view effects. Results At the patient level, periapical pathology affected 58.6% of individuals worldwide. Secondary tooth-level analysis showed a prevalence of 7.3%, ranging from 2.5% in Oceania to 9.6% in Africa. Maxillary teeth (9.3%) were more frequently affected than mandibular teeth (5.3%), with maxillary first molars showing the highest prevalence (18.6%). Prevalence increased with age, from 2.9% (≤20 years) to 10.5% (≥61 years). Endodontically treated teeth showed markedly higher prevalence of post-treatment periapical radiolucencies (44.3%) than untreated teeth (2.6%) (odds ratio = 21.6; confidence interval 19.1-23.1; P < .001). Voxel size and field-of-view did not influence outcomes. Conclusion Periapical pathology is highly prevalent worldwide, with notable regional and age-related differences. Endodontically treated teeth showed a disproportionately high prevalence of periapical pathology.
KW - Cone-beam computed tomography
KW - endodontics
KW - epidemiology
KW - periapical pathology
KW - prevalence
KW - root canal treatment
U2 - 10.1016/j.joen.2026.01.021
DO - 10.1016/j.joen.2026.01.021
M3 - Article
C2 - 41679428
SN - 0099-2399
JO - Journal of Endodontics
JF - Journal of Endodontics
ER -