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Study of the Month – June 2026: Zirconia Implants in Real-World Clinical Practice: Insights from 779 Implants

10.7.2026 · 7 min



Key Takeaway
A recent scoping review including 779 zirconia implants in 459 patients found that the available clinical literature increasingly includes patients with selected systemic and local risk factors. Rather than offering definitive conclusions for specific risk groups, the review provides an important overview of how the evidence base for zirconia implants is evolving under real-world clinical conditions and highlights where future research is still needed.




How Strong Is the Evidence Beyond the Ideal Patient?'

Most clinical studies on dental implants focus on healthy individuals treated under controlled conditions. Everyday clinical practice, however, often involves patients who smoke, present with systemic conditions such as diabetes or cardiovascular disease, or require immediate placement and loading protocols.

This raises an important question:

How are zirconia dental implants reported in the available clinical literature involving local or systemic risk factors?

A recent scoping review conducted by the ZrO Summit 2025 Working Group provides a comprehensive overview of the available scientific evidence.





What Was Evaluated?

The review systematically analyzed published clinical evidence on zirconia implants placed in patients with systemic or local risk factors.

The evidence base included:

• 10 clinical studies

• 459 patients

• 779 zirconia implants

• Follow-up periods ranging from 1 to 5 years


The review was conducted according to PRISMA-ScR guidelines and the Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI) methodology, providing a structured evidence map currently available on this topic.



Which Risk Factors Were Included?

The studies reported outcomes for zirconia implants placed in patients with a variety of clinical conditions.

Systemic Factors


Available evidence included patients with:

• Well-controlled diabetes mellitus

• Controlled cardiovascular disease

• Controlled HIV infection

Local Factors

Studies also evaluated outcomes in cases involving:

• Moderate to heavy smoking

• Immediate implant placement

• Immediate loading

• Bone augmentation procedures

• Narrow-diameter or short implant designs

These patient populations more closely reflect routine clinical practice than the highly selected populations commonly included in traditional implant studies.



Immediate Loading Was Frequently Reported in the Reviewed Studies

One of the most noteworthy findings of the review was the frequent reporting of immediate loading protocols in the included studies.

Of the 779 zirconia implants included:

• 671 implants were immediately loaded

• 188 implants were conventionally loaded

These findings indicate that immediate loading protocols were frequently represented in the reviewed clinical evidence, while patient selection, implant design, surgical protocol, and primary stability remain important clinical considerations.



Marginal Bone Levels Remained Within Clinically Acceptable Limits

Across the included studies, reported marginal bone loss values were generally within accepted clinical thresholds during the available follow-up periods.

Despite differences in patient profiles, implant systems, and treatment protocols, the reported peri-implant bone levels were generally stable within the follow-up periods of the included studies.



What Does This Mean for Clinical Practice?

The primary value of this review is not that it provides definitive answers for every risk factor, but rather that it shows how zirconia implants have been reported in studies involving increasingly complex patient populations.

The available evidence suggests that:

• Controlled systemic conditions were represented in the reviewed literature and should be assessed through individualized clinical judgment.

• Local risk factors require case-specific clinical judgment.

• Immediate placement and immediate loading protocols are already well represented in the literature.

• Additional long-term prospective research remains necessary


While this review summarizes the currently available clinical evidence, treatment planning in risk-factor patients extends beyond individual study outcomes. Factors such as implant design, primary stability, soft tissue management, and biomechanical considerations remain important components of clinical decision-making.

For a broader discussion of treatment concepts and implant design considerations in compromised patients, read our article Ceramic Implants in Compromised Patients.



Where Does the Evidence Need to Grow?

The review highlights several areas where further research is needed, including:

• Osteoporosis

• Autoimmune disorders

• Head and neck radiotherapy patients

• Standardized surgical protocols

• Standardized prosthetic workflows

• Long-term outcomes beyond five years

• Direct comparisons of contemporary two-piece zirconia implant systems


These topics may inform future clinical recommendations as additional evidence becomes available.



Conclusion

This scoping review shows that zirconia implants are increasingly being studied beyond ideal patient populations, including in clinical scenarios involving selected local and systemic risk factors.

While additional long-term data are still needed, the available literature reports clinically acceptable outcomes in selected challenging treatment situations. As the evidence base continues to expand, it may more closely reflect the patients clinicians encounter in daily practice.




FAQ – Zirconia Implants in Real-World Clinical Practice

1. Is there scientific evidence supporting zirconia implants in patients with risk factors?
Yes. The current scoping review identified 10 clinical studies involving 459 patients and 779 zirconia implants placed in patients presenting a variety of local and systemic risk factors.
2. Which risk factors have been investigated in zirconia implant studies?
The available literature includes patients with controlled diabetes, cardiovascular disease, HIV infection, and moderate-to-heavy smoking habits, as well as cases involving immediate placement, immediate loading, and bone augmentation procedures.
3. Have zirconia implants been studied in patients with diabetes?
Yes. Several studies included patients with well-controlled diabetes mellitus. While the available evidence remains limited, reported outcomes were generally within expected clinical parameters.
4. Is there evidence supporting immediate loading of zirconia implants?
Yes. In this review, 671 of the 779 zirconia implants were reported in immediate loading protocols, indicating that this treatment approach was well represented in the included clinical studies.
5. What does the current evidence show regarding marginal bone loss around zirconia implants?
Across the included studies, reported marginal bone loss remained within clinically acceptable ranges despite variations in patient profiles, implant systems, and treatment protocols.
6. How strong is the current evidence for zirconia implants in risk-factor patients?
The evidence base is steadily growing but remains limited primarily to smaller clinical studies and observational data. Larger prospective trials and longer follow-up periods are still needed.
7. Which patient groups remain underrepresented in zirconia implant research?
The review identifies significant evidence gaps in patients with osteoporosis, autoimmune disorders, previous head and neck radiotherapy, and other complex systemic conditions.
8. Can clinical recommendations already be made based on the available evidence?
The current literature provides valuable clinical insights, but further standardized long-term studies are necessary before definitive recommendations can be established for many risk-factor populations.
9. Why is real-world evidence important in implant dentistry?
Real-world evidence reflects the types of patients clinicians routinely treat in practice and complements data generated from highly selected populations enrolled in controlled clinical studies.
10. What is the key takeaway from this scoping review?
The review indicates that zirconia implants are increasingly being evaluated and used in patients with local and systemic risk factors, while also highlighting the need for additional long-term and protocol-standardized research.



Prof. Dr. med. dent. E. Schnurr
Prof. Dr. med. dent. E. Schnurr (Scientific Advisor, SDS)
Provides scientific guidance for SWISS DENTAL SOLUTIONS. She researches the oral microbiome, biofilm infections, and their impact on overall health: from clinical research and data analysis to drug development.

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