Yeung C Albert, Chong Lee Yee, Glenny Anne-Marie
Department of Public Health, NHS Lanarkshire, Kirklands, Fallside Road, Bothwell, UK, G71 8BB.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2015 Sep 3;2015(9):CD003876. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD003876.pub4.
Dental caries remains a major public health problem in most industrialised countries, affecting 60% to 90% of schoolchildren and the vast majority of adults. Milk may provide a relatively cost-effective vehicle for fluoride delivery in the prevention of dental caries. This is an update of a Cochrane review first published in 2005.
To assess the effects of milk fluoridation for preventing dental caries at a community level.
We searched the Cochrane Oral Health Group Trials Register (inception to November 2014), the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) (The Cochrane Library, 2014, Issue 10), MEDLINE via OVID (1946 to November 2014) and EMBASE via OVID (1980 to November 2014). We also searched the U.S. National Institutes of Health Trials Register (https://clinicaltrials.gov) and the WHO International Clinical Trials Registry Platform (http://apps.who.int/trialsearch) for ongoing trials. We did not place any restrictions on the language or date of publication when searching the electronic databases.
Randomised controlled trials (RCTs), with an intervention and follow-up period of at least two years, comparing fluoridated milk with non-fluoridated milk.
Two authors independently assessed trial risk of bias and extracted data. We used standard methodological procedures expected by The Cochrane Collaboration.
We included one unpublished RCT, randomising 180 children aged three years at study commencement. The setting was nursery schools in an area with high prevalence of dental caries and a low level of fluoride in drinking water. Data from 166 participants were available for analysis. The study carried a high risk of bias. After three years, there was a reduction of caries in permanent teeth (mean difference (MD) -0.13, 95% confidence interval (CI) -0.24 to -0.02) and in primary teeth (MD -1.14, 95% CI -1.86 to -0.42), as measured by the decayed, missing and filled teeth index (DMFT for permanent teeth and dmft for primary teeth). For primary teeth, this is a substantial reduction, equivalent to a prevented fraction of 31%. For permanent teeth, the disease level was very low in the study, resulting in a small absolute effect size. The included study did not report any other outcomes of interest for this review (adverse events, dental pain, antibiotic use or requirement for general anaesthesia due to dental procedures).
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: There is low quality evidence to suggest fluoridated milk may be beneficial to schoolchildren, contributing to a substantial reduction in dental caries in primary teeth. Due to the low quality of the evidence, further research is likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and is likely to change the estimate. There was only one relatively small study, which had important methodological limitations on the data for the effectiveness in reducing caries. Furthermore, there was no information about the potential harms of the intervention. Additional RCTs of high quality are needed before we can draw definitive conclusions about the benefits of milk fluoridation.
在大多数工业化国家,龋齿仍然是一个主要的公共卫生问题,影响着60%至90%的学龄儿童以及绝大多数成年人。牛奶可能是预防龋齿的一种相对经济有效的氟输送载体。这是对2005年首次发表的Cochrane系统评价的更新。
评估社区层面牛奶加氟预防龋齿的效果。
我们检索了Cochrane口腔卫生组试验注册库(建库至2014年11月)、Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL)(《Cochrane图书馆》,2014年第10期)、通过OVID检索的MEDLINE(1946年至2014年11月)以及通过OVID检索的EMBASE(1980年至2014年11月)。我们还检索了美国国立卫生研究院试验注册库(https://clinicaltrials.gov)和世界卫生组织国际临床试验注册平台(http://apps.who.int/trialsearch)以查找正在进行的试验。在检索电子数据库时,我们未对语言或出版日期设置任何限制。
随机对照试验(RCT),干预和随访期至少两年,比较加氟牛奶与未加氟牛奶。
两位作者独立评估试验的偏倚风险并提取数据。我们采用了Cochrane协作网期望的标准方法程序。
我们纳入了一项未发表的RCT,该试验在研究开始时将180名3岁儿童随机分组。研究地点是龋齿患病率高且饮用水氟含量低的地区的幼儿园。166名参与者的数据可用于分析。该研究存在较高的偏倚风险。三年后,根据龋失补牙指数(恒牙用DMFT,乳牙用dmft)测量,恒牙龋齿减少(平均差(MD)-0.13,95%置信区间(CI)-0.24至-0.02),乳牙龋齿也减少(MD -1.14,95%CI -1.86至-0.42)。对于乳牙,这是一个显著的减少,相当于预防率为31%。对于恒牙,该研究中的疾病水平非常低,导致绝对效应量较小。纳入的研究未报告本评价感兴趣的任何其他结果(不良事件、牙痛、抗生素使用或因牙科手术需要全身麻醉)。
有低质量证据表明加氟牛奶可能对学龄儿童有益,可使乳牙龋齿大幅减少。由于证据质量低,进一步的研究可能会对我们对效应估计的信心产生重要影响,并可能改变估计值。只有一项相对较小的研究,其在减少龋齿有效性数据方面存在重要的方法学局限性。此外,没有关于该干预潜在危害的信息。在我们能够就牛奶加氟的益处得出明确结论之前,需要更多高质量的RCT。