Dental caries detection in children using intraoral scans and deep learning
- PMID: 40527440
- DOI: 10.1016/j.jdent.2025.105906
Dental caries detection in children using intraoral scans and deep learning
Abstract
Objective: This study aimed to demonstrate the use of deep learning for automating caries detection using intraoral scan data from children and to evaluate diagnostic agreement between the models' predictions and dental practitioner assessments on 3D models.
Methods: Intraoral scans were collected from two cohorts at Murdoch Children's Research Institute. Two researchers annotated scan meshes using the International Caries Classification and Management System. A pre-processing pipeline converted the data into a 2D format. Carious teeth from the first cohort (n = 332) were split at the participant level into training (n = 192), validation (n = 63), and test (n = 77) sets. An Attention U-Net was trained to classify initial, moderate, and extensive dental caries. Segmentation and lesion detection performance was evaluated on the test set using the metrics Intersection over Union (IoU), Sensitivity (SE), Specificity (SP), and Precision (P). Carious teeth from the second independent cohort (n = 119) were used for external validation. Multilevel logistic regression assessed diagnostic agreement to compare the model performance to dental practitioners across all caries thresholds (initial, moderate and extensive).
Results: For segmentation tasks, the model had the best performance for extensive caries (SE 71 %, P 66 %, IOU 0.55). The model showed overall promising performance for lesion detection (SE 67 %, P 73 %). Performance slightly declined on an external dataset. Diagnostic agreement between the model and dental practitioners was comparable across all disease thresholds: initial (odds ratio OR 0.82, 95 % Confidence Interval (CI) 0.6-1.15), moderate (OR 0.9, 95 % CI 0.5-1.6) and extensive (OR 0.85, 95 % CI 0.42-1.71).
Conclusion: The proof-of-concept demonstrates that deep learning can achieve moderate performance in detecting extensive caries from intraoral scans, though performance was limited for early and moderate lesions. Further research is needed to improve model accuracy and generalisability across all disease stages.
Clinical significance: This study represents an exploratory effort towards developing AI-assisted caries detection using intraoral scanner data in children. While the long-term potential of such technology could include support for early diagnosis, enhanced caries monitoring, and a reduction in the subjectivity of caries assessment, our current findings indicate that significant model refinement and extensive validation are imperative, especially for the detection of initial carious lesions, before such clinical applications can be realized.
Keywords: Artificial Intelligence; Computer-Assisted; Deep Learning; Dental; Dental Caries; Image Interpretation; Imaging; Models; Quantitative Light Fluorescence; Three-Dimensional.
Copyright © 2025. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of competing interest The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: Christoph Vannahme reports a relationship with 3 Shape TRIOS A/S at the time that this research was undertaken that includes: employment. Stavroula Michou reports a relationship with 3 Shape TRIS A/S at the time the research was undertaken that includes: employment. Mathias Lambach reports a relationship with 3 Shape TRIS A/S at the time the research was undertaken that includes: Industrial PhD Candidate. Mathia Lambach reports a relationship with Innovation Fund Denmark that includes: funding grants. Mihiri Silva reports a relationship with Murdoch Children’s Research Institute that includes: employment and funding grants. David Burgner reports a relationship with Australia National Health and Medical Research Council Investigator Grant that includes: funding grants. If there are other authors, they declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.
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