Transverse Changes in Combined Orthodontic and Surgical Treatment with Segmental LeFort I Osteotomy: Comparing Aligners with Fixed Appliances
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Abstract
Background and Objectives:Transverse maxillary expansion by segmental LeFort I osteotomy is historically considered the
least stable of all orthognathic movements, with reported molar relapse rates exceeding 30 to
50% in prior literature. Despite this common perception among practitioners, a comprehensive
characterization of dental and skeletal transverse dimensional change across all three phases of
surgical-orthodontic treatment has not been established. These phases include pre-surgical
orthodontics, surgery, and post-surgical orthodontics. Furthermore, no studies have evaluated
transverse stability specifically in patients treated with clear aligners and segmental maxillary
expansion-despite growing clinical adoption of aligners in orthognathic surgery protocols. The
primary objectives of this study were: (1) to characterize transverse dimensional changes at the
skeletal and dental levels across each treatment phase, (2) to compare outcomes between
patients treated with clear aligners versus fixed appliances, and (3) to identify factors
associated with post-surgical transverse constriction.
Materials and Methods:
This was a retrospective cohort study of 34 patients (15 females, 19 males; mean age 36.1
years) who underwent segmental LeFort I osteotomy for transverse maxillary expansion
combined with orthodontic treatment. Patient records were collected from two private oral
surgery offices and four private practice orthodontists in the greater Seattle area. Fourteen
patients were treated with clear aligners and 20 with fixed appliances. Cone-beam computed
tomography was obtained at up to four time points: pre-treatment (T0), before surgery (T1),
immediately post-surgery (T2), and completion of treatment (T3). Four transverse
measurements were evaluated at each time point: posterior skeletal width, anterior skeletal
width, intermolar width (IMW; posterior dental), and inter-canine width (ICW; anterior dental),
as well as bilateral buccal-lingual first molar inclination. The fixed appliance group presented
with larger pre-treatment transverse discrepancies, a different distribution of treatment time
across phases, and was planned for greater surgical expansion compared with the clear aligner
group. Statistical analyses included Welch two-sample t-tests, Wilcoxon rank-sum tests,
McNemar's test, Pearson correlation, and bivariate linear regression.
Results:
Pre-surgical orthodontic phase (T1–T0): Pre-surgical orthodontics produced small expansionary
changes at both dental levels (IMW: 1.18 ± 1.78 mm; ICW: 0.56 ± 1.78 mm), with no significant
between-group differences (IMW: p = 0.572; ICW: p = 0.952). Pre-surgical orthodontics
contributed approximately one-third of total net IMW expansion and half of total net ICW
expansion.
Surgical phase (T2–T1): Mean posterior skeletal expansion was 4.31 ± 2.32 mm overall, with the
fixed appliance group achieving significantly greater expansion than the clear aligner group
(5.14 ± 2.16 mm vs. 3.04 ± 2.00 mm; p = 0.008). No significant differences between-group were
found for anterior skeletal expansion (3.49 ± 2.66 mm overall; p = 0.495), or ICW expansion
(0.68 ± 0.88 mm overall; p = 0.854). For IMW expansion, there was a trend toward more
expansion in the fixed appliance group (2.61 ± 1.92 mm overall; fixed appliances: 3.04 mm vs.
clear aligners: 1.99 mm; p = 0.107). Surgical expansion was greater posteriorly than anteriorly
at both skeletal and dental levels. Planned IMW expansion was strongly correlated with
achieved expansion across all patients (r = 0.904, p < 0.001), with both groups achieving
approximately 96% of planned expansion.
Post-surgical phase (T3–T2): Posterior and anterior skeletal changes were minimal and non-
significant between groups (posterior: 0.06 ± 0.66 mm overall, p = 0.635; anterior: −0.05 ± 1.93
mm overall, p = 0.200). Significant IMW constriction occurred overall (−2.04 ± 1.35 mm), with
greater constriction in the fixed appliance group (−2.62 mm vs. −1.21 mm; p < 0.001). ICW
constriction was −0.92 ± 1.12 mm overall (fixed appliances: −1.01 mm; clear aligners: −0.80
mm; p = 0.557). Significant lingual tipping of the right (−3.36 ± 3.56° overall; fixed appliances:
−4.40°; clear aligners: −1.88°; p = 0.037) and left first molars (−2.77 ± 3.02° overall; fixed
appliances: −3.88°; clear aligners: −1.20°; p = 0.005) occurred, with greater tipping in the fixed
appliance group.
Regression analysis: Total net IMW expansion (β = −0.28, p = 0.009, R² = 0.22), surgical
expansion (β = −0.31, p = 0.010, R² = 0.19), and appliance type (β = −1.41, p = 0.002, R² =
0.27) were significant predictors of post-surgical IMW constriction. Total net ICW
expansion (T2–T0) was a significant predictor of post-surgical ICW constriction (β = −0.30,
p = 0.004, R² = 0.26). Treatment duration, gender, pre-treatment transverse discrepancy
magnitude, and anteroposterior classification were not significantly associated with post-
surgical constriction in any measurement.
Occlusal outcomes: No patients presented with a posterior crossbite at treatment completion,
with no significant difference between appliance groups. Four of 30 patients (13%) who
presented with a pre-treatment crossbite ended with edge-to-edge posterior overjet, while
none of the four patients without a pre-treatment crossbite developed edge-to-edge overjet (p
< 0.001). The rate of edge-to-edge posterior overjet did not differ significantly between
appliance groups (clear aligners: 7.1%; fixed appliances: 15.0%; p = 0.627).
Conclusions:
Skeletal expansion following segmental LeFort I osteotomy was highly stable through treatment
completion. Post-surgical changes were predominantly dentoalveolar in nature, with IMW
demonstrating the greatest constriction. Expansion magnitude was the most consistent
predictor of post-surgical IMW constriction. The greater constriction observed in the fixed
appliance group could be attributed to greater expansion magnitude, case complexity, and
larger pre-treatment transverse discrepancies in that group. Planned and achieved IMW
expansion were strongly correlated, confirming high surgical predictability regardless of
appliance type. Within the scope of this study, clear aligners demonstrated adequate ability for
achieving surgical expansion and maintaining the transverse dimension during the post-surgical
phase through the removal of appliances. These findings should be interpreted within the
context of the study's retrospective design, modest sample size, short-term follow-up, and
bivariate linear regression approach. Prospective studies with larger sample sizes, multivariable
modeling, and long-term follow-up are needed to confirm these findings.
Description
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2026
