# The efficacy of freehand, pilot drilled and fully guided implant surgery in partially edentulous patients: A randomized control trial

**Authors:** Abdulkhaliq Ali F. Alshadidi, Lujain Ibrahim N. Aldosari, Abdullah Hasan A. Alshehri, Rayan Ibrahim H. Binduhayym, Rajamanoj Kondaveeti, Vishwanath Gurumurthy, Sunil Kumar Vaddamanu

PMC · DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0341894 · 2026-01-27

## TL;DR

Fully guided implant surgery is more accurate, faster, and leads to better patient satisfaction compared to freehand or pilot-drilled methods in partially edentulous patients.

## Contribution

This study provides empirical evidence that fully guided implant surgery is superior in accuracy, surgical time, and patient outcomes.

## Key findings

- Fully guided surgery showed superior accuracy (p < 0.001) compared to other techniques.
- Fully guided surgery had shorter surgical times (45 minutes) and fewer complications (5%) compared to freehand and pilot-drilled methods.
- Early implant failure was lowest in the pilot-drilled group (0%) and higher in the freehand group (13.3%).

## Abstract

Partial edentulism poses challenges to oral function, aesthetics, and quality of life. Implant placement techniques—freehand, pilot-drilled, and fully guided—differ in accuracy, surgical time, and outcomes. In this study, only one predefined index implant per patient was analyzed to avoid confounding from multi-implant cases, and template fabrication for the pilot-drilled group was performed using diagnostic wax-up and thermoplastic material. This study evaluated these techniques in partially edentulous patients.

Ninety patients were randomly assigned to three groups: freehand (n = 30), pilot- drilled (n = 30), and fully guided (n = 30). Surgery duration, implant placement accuracy, post- operative complications, early implant failure rates, and patient satisfaction were measured. Accuracy was assessed using standardized CBCT imaging at 12 months, and satisfaction was evaluated via a validated questionnaire six months after prosthetic loading.

The fully guided technique demonstrated superior accuracy (p < 0.001), shorter surgical times (45 minutes vs. 60 and 75 minutes, p < 0.01), fewer complications (5% vs. 15% and 20%, p < 0.05), and higher satisfaction (9.2/10, p < 0.01). Early implant failure, defined at the implant level, occurred in 4/30 implants (13.3%) in the freehand group, 0/30 in the pilot-drilled group, and 2/30 in the fully guided group (p < 0.05).

Fully guided implant surgery outperformed other techniques in accuracy, efficiency, and patient satisfaction. These findings support fully guided, prosthetically driven workflows as a preferred option for partially edentulous patients, particularly in cases requiring high precision.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** edentulism (MESH:D007575)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

12 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12843514/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12843514