EFP Probe: a new integrated tool for periodontal assessment

Making diagnostic decisions more consistent and straightforward for clinicians.

27 January, 2026 / infocus
 Will Peakin  

The European Federation of Periodontology has announced the EFP Probe, a new diagnostic instrument designed to bring screening and treatment functions together in a single tool.

The EFP Probe was developed in collaboration with HuFriedyGroup to align with the current periodontal classification and the EFP’s clinical practice guidelines, making diagnostic decisions more consistent and straightforward for clinicians.

For decades, periodontal assessments have required two different instruments; a screening probe (typically based on thresholds established in the early 1980s) and a treatment probe for millimetre-level measurements.

Professor Moritz Kebschull, past EFP president, said the limitations of this approach became increasingly clear as classifications and guidelines evolved: “We are now using diagnostic thresholds that differ from those defined more than 40 years ago,” he said. “It seemed logical to develop a single probe that reflects today’s evidence and supports clinicians in applying the guidelines more intuitively.”

The EFP Probe combines the WHO-style screening design with the widely used UNC 15, but adapts the band markings to 4mm and 6mm, consistent with the thresholds used in the current classification. This enables clinicians to identify, at a glance, whether a situation aligns with periodontal health, may require non-surgical therapy or could indicate a need for surgical intervention.

In addition, the probe functions fully as a periodontal probe, with millimetre markings from 1mm to 15mm (excluding 2mm, which was removed following field testing). Its ball tip helps detect overhangs and plaque-retentive factors, features relevant at all stages of periodontal care.

“This instrument is essentially an improved UNC 15 combined with updated screening thresholds,” said Prof Kebschull. “It offers a practical way to integrate the classification and the guidelines into everyday practice.”

More information: https://hufriedygroup.eu/en/efp-probe

Tags: EFP / Periodontal / probe

Categories: News

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