# Occlusal Relationships and Dental Changes in Mixed Dentition Patients Treated with Clear Aligners: A 2-Year Follow Up

**Authors:** Francesca Gazzani, Chiara Pavoni, Francesca Chiara De Razza, Letizia Lugli, Saveria Loberto, Alessio Lachi, Paola Cozza, Roberta Lione

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/children13020298 · 2026-02-21

## TL;DR

Clear aligners in early mixed dentition lead to stable dental changes over two years without relapse, offering a reliable early orthodontic option.

## Contribution

Demonstrates the long-term stability of clear aligner treatment in early mixed dentition without retention.

## Key findings

- Clear aligners significantly increased transverse arch dimensions and reduced overjet in early mixed dentition.
- Dental changes remained stable over a 2-year follow-up with minimal and non-significant relapse.
- No retention was used, yet improvements in arch width and molar derotation were maintained.

## Abstract

What are the main findings?
Clear aligner treatment in early mixed dentition resulted in statistically significant increases in transverse arch dimension, controlled molar derotation, torque modification, and overjet reduction.The dentoalveolar and occlusal changes achieved at the end of active treatment remained stable over a 2-year follow-up, with only minimal and non-significant relapse.

Clear aligner treatment in early mixed dentition resulted in statistically significant increases in transverse arch dimension, controlled molar derotation, torque modification, and overjet reduction.

The dentoalveolar and occlusal changes achieved at the end of active treatment remained stable over a 2-year follow-up, with only minimal and non-significant relapse.

What are the implications of the main findings?
Clear aligners represent an effective interceptive orthodontic modality for managing transverse discrepancies and anterior irregularity during growth.The demonstrated long-term stability, even in the absence of retention, supports the role of aligner-based protocols in early dentoalveolar correction and growth-guided orthodontic therapy.

Clear aligners represent an effective interceptive orthodontic modality for managing transverse discrepancies and anterior irregularity during growth.

The demonstrated long-term stability, even in the absence of retention, supports the role of aligner-based protocols in early dentoalveolar correction and growth-guided orthodontic therapy.

Background: This study assessed the long-term stability of dental arch changes achieved through clear aligner treatment in growing patients during the early mixed dentition stage. Methods: This retrospective study included 20 patients (mean age 8.3 ± 0.4 years) treated with clear aligners according to a standardized sequential expansion protocol. No additional auxiliaries, interproximal reductions, or retentions were used. Dental casts were collected at baseline (T0), end of treatment (T1), and two years post-treatment without retention (T2). Linear and angular measurements (arch width, molar and incisor torque, Henry’s angle, overjet, overbite, and Little’s index) were assessed on digital models. Friedman ANOVA and Wilcoxon signed-rank tests were applied (α = 0.05). Results: At T1-T0, significant transversal expansion was achieved in both arches (U6–6 mesial +2.1 mm; L6–6 mesial +2.4 mm; p < 0.05), with favorable torque changes and a reduction in overjet (−1.5 mm). From T1 to T2, only minimal, non-significant relapse was detected, except for a slight reduction in lower left molar torque (−1.1°). The T2-T0 comparison confirmed stable improvements in mesial intermolar widths (upper +2.0 mm; lower +1.6 mm), molar derotations, and overjets (−1.9 mm), with no significant loss of expansion or sagittal correction. Conclusions: Clear aligners in early mixed dentition achieved significant and stable dental arch modifications over a 2-year follow-up without the use of retention appliances. This therapeutic approach may represent a reliable interceptive option in growing patients.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** bite (MESH:D001733), injury to (MESH:D014947), Class II malocclusion (MESH:D008312), tooth eruption disorders (MESH:D014079), anterior (MESH:D020759), dental discrepancy (MESH:D009057), open (MESH:D005597), anterior crowding (MESH:D008310), transversal discrepancies (MESH:D009188), dental caries (MESH:D003731), dento-skeletal Class III (MESH:D008313), overjet (MESH:D057887), mandibular anterior crowding (MESH:D008338), dental agenesis or supernumerary teeth (MESH:D014096)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12939305/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12939305