Kaufman Laura B, Setiono Tiffany K, Doros Gheorghe, Andersen Stacy, Silliman Rebecca A, Friedman Paula K, Perls Thomas T
Section of Geriatrics, Department of Medicine, Boston Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts; Department of General Dentistry, Boston University, Henry M. Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts.
J Am Geriatr Soc. 2014 Jun;62(6):1168-73. doi: 10.1111/jgs.12842. Epub 2014 Jun 2.
To determine whether oral health is better in centenarians than in a published birth cohort-matched sample and to compare oral health in centenarian offspring with a case-controlled reference sample.
Observational cross-sectional study.
New England Centenarian Study (NECS).
Seventy-three centenarians, 467 offspring, and 251 offspring generation-reference cohort subjects from the NECS.
A self-report questionnaire was administered to measure oral health in all three groups, with edentulous rate as the primary outcome measure. The NECS made information on sociodemographic characteristics and medical history available. Centenarian results were compared with published birth cohort-matched results. Data from offspring and reference cohorts were analyzed to determine differences in oral health and associations between oral health measures and specific medical conditions.
The edentulous rate of centenarians (36.5%) was lower than that of their birth cohort (46%) when they were aged 65 to 74 in 1971 to 1974 (according to National Center of Health Statistics). Adjusting for confounding factors, the reference cohort was more likely to be edentulous (adjusted odds ratio (AOR) = 2.78, 95% confidence interval CI = 1.17-6.56), less likely to have all or more than half of their own teeth (AOR = 0.48, 95% CI = 0.3-0.76), and less likely to report excellent or very good oral health (AOR = 0.65, 95% CI = 0.45-0.94) than the centenarian offspring.
Centenarians and their offspring have better oral health than their respective birth cohorts. Oral health may prove to be a helpful marker for systemic health and healthy aging.
确定百岁老人的口腔健康状况是否优于已发表的出生队列匹配样本,并将百岁老人后代的口腔健康状况与病例对照参考样本进行比较。
观察性横断面研究。
新英格兰百岁老人研究(NECS)。
来自NECS的73名百岁老人、467名后代和251名后代代际参考队列受试者。
对所有三组进行自我报告问卷调查以测量口腔健康状况,以无牙率作为主要结局指标。NECS提供了社会人口学特征和病史信息。将百岁老人的结果与已发表的出生队列匹配结果进行比较。分析后代和参考队列的数据,以确定口腔健康状况的差异以及口腔健康指标与特定医疗状况之间的关联。
根据美国国家卫生统计中心的数据,1971年至1974年,当百岁老人65至74岁时,其无牙率(36.5%)低于其出生队列(46%)。调整混杂因素后,参考队列比百岁老人后代更易无牙(调整优势比(AOR)=2.78,95%置信区间CI=1.17-6.56),拥有全部或超过半数自身牙齿的可能性更小(AOR=0.48,95%CI=0.3-0.76),报告口腔健康状况为优秀或非常好的可能性更小(AOR=0.65,95%CI=0.45-0.94)。
百岁老人及其后代的口腔健康状况优于各自的出生队列。口腔健康可能被证明是全身健康和健康老龄化的一个有用指标。