TY - JOUR
T1 - Deep Caries Management
T2 - EFCD-ESE-ORCA S3-Level Clinical Practice Guideline
AU - Schwendicke, Falk
AU - Kosan, Esra
AU - Banerjee, Avijit
AU - Baysan, Aylin
AU - Bjørndal, Lars
AU - Ceballos, Laura
AU - Duncan, Henry F.
AU - Herbst, Sascha
AU - Neuhaus, Klaus W.
AU - O'Connell, Anne C.
AU - Paris, Sebastian
AU - Dujic, Helena
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2026 The Author(s). International Endodontic Journal published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Endodontic Society.
PY - 2026
Y1 - 2026
N2 - Objective: To develop an evidence-based S3-level clinical practice guideline for the management of deep and extremely deep caries in vital permanent teeth. Methods: An evidence-based medical guideline based on systematically searched and appraised evidence as well as a structured consensus (S3-level) was jointly developed by the European Federation of Conservative Dentistry (EFCD), the European Society of Endodontology (ESE), the Organization for Caries Research (ORCA) and the German Society of Conservative Dentistry (DGZ), following the methodological framework of the Association of Scientific Medical Societies in Germany (AWMF) and the GRADE approach. Four working groups formulated key clinical questions regarding (1) caries removal strategies, (2) cavity liners, (3) management of exposed pulps and (4) materials for direct pulp capping and pulpotomy. Systematic reviews were conducted for each question, and evidence was synthesised and graded for quality. A structured consensus process was used to formulate recommendations. In order to encourage its wide dissemination, this article is freely accessible on Clinical Oral Investigations, International Endodontic Journal and Caries Research journals' websites. Results: Evidence supports selective (SE) or stepwise caries removal (SW) over non-selective removal (NSE) to reduce the risk of pulp exposure in deep caries. Routine use of cavity liners after caries removal showed no consistent clinical benefit and is not routinely recommended. For vital pulp therapy following pulp exposure, both direct pulp capping and pulpotomy are effective options in teeth without irreversible pulpitis, while pulpotomy is an acceptable alternative to pulpectomy in cases with signs of irreversible pulpitis. Hydraulic calcium silicate cements demonstrated superior clinical outcomes compared to calcium hydroxide and should be preferred for pulp capping and pulpotomy. The certainty of evidence ranged from very low to moderate across questions and outcomes. Conclusions: For deep caries, maintaining pulp vitality by using less invasive management strategies is supported by current evidence. Implementation of this guideline requires clinician training, patient-centered decision-making and consideration of economic and practical factors. Further research is needed, particularly for extremely deep caries and towards long-term outcomes.
AB - Objective: To develop an evidence-based S3-level clinical practice guideline for the management of deep and extremely deep caries in vital permanent teeth. Methods: An evidence-based medical guideline based on systematically searched and appraised evidence as well as a structured consensus (S3-level) was jointly developed by the European Federation of Conservative Dentistry (EFCD), the European Society of Endodontology (ESE), the Organization for Caries Research (ORCA) and the German Society of Conservative Dentistry (DGZ), following the methodological framework of the Association of Scientific Medical Societies in Germany (AWMF) and the GRADE approach. Four working groups formulated key clinical questions regarding (1) caries removal strategies, (2) cavity liners, (3) management of exposed pulps and (4) materials for direct pulp capping and pulpotomy. Systematic reviews were conducted for each question, and evidence was synthesised and graded for quality. A structured consensus process was used to formulate recommendations. In order to encourage its wide dissemination, this article is freely accessible on Clinical Oral Investigations, International Endodontic Journal and Caries Research journals' websites. Results: Evidence supports selective (SE) or stepwise caries removal (SW) over non-selective removal (NSE) to reduce the risk of pulp exposure in deep caries. Routine use of cavity liners after caries removal showed no consistent clinical benefit and is not routinely recommended. For vital pulp therapy following pulp exposure, both direct pulp capping and pulpotomy are effective options in teeth without irreversible pulpitis, while pulpotomy is an acceptable alternative to pulpectomy in cases with signs of irreversible pulpitis. Hydraulic calcium silicate cements demonstrated superior clinical outcomes compared to calcium hydroxide and should be preferred for pulp capping and pulpotomy. The certainty of evidence ranged from very low to moderate across questions and outcomes. Conclusions: For deep caries, maintaining pulp vitality by using less invasive management strategies is supported by current evidence. Implementation of this guideline requires clinician training, patient-centered decision-making and consideration of economic and practical factors. Further research is needed, particularly for extremely deep caries and towards long-term outcomes.
KW - clinical practice guideline
KW - deep caries
KW - direct pulp capping
KW - evidence-based dentistry
KW - non selective caries removal
KW - pulpotomy
KW - selective excavation
KW - stepwise caries removal
KW - vital pulp treatment
U2 - 10.1111/iej.70132
DO - 10.1111/iej.70132
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 42017497
AN - SCOPUS:105036411987
SN - 0143-2885
JO - International Endodontic Journal
JF - International Endodontic Journal
ER -