Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Plymouth, Peninsula Dental School, room C507, Portland Square, Plymouth, Plymouth, Devon, PL4 8AA, UK.
Office of Research and Innovation, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, Dublin, Ireland.
BMC Pediatr. 2019 Apr 23;19(1):122. doi: 10.1186/s12887-019-1511-x.
Obesity and caries in young people are issues of public health concern. Even though research into the relationship between the two conditions has been conducted for many years, to date the results remain equivocal. The aim of this paper was to determine the nature of the relationship between Body Mass Index (BMI) and caries in children and adolescents, by conducting a systematic review of the published literature.
A systematic search of studies examining the association between BMI and caries in individuals younger than 18 years old was conducted. The electronic bibliographic databases PubMed, MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL, CENTRAL and Google Scholar were searched. References of included studies were checked to identify further potential studies. Internal and external validity as well as reporting quality were assessed using the validated Methodological Evaluation of Observational Research checklist. Results were stratified based on the risk of flaws in 14 domains 10 of which were considered major and four minor.
Of the 4208 initially identified studies, 84 papers met the inclusion criteria and were included in the review; conclusions were mainly drawn from 7 studies at lower risk of flaws. Three main types of association between BMI and caries were found: 26 studies showed a positive relationship, 19 showed a negative association, and 43 found no association between the variables of interest. Some studies showed more than one pattern of association. Assessment of confounders was the domain most commonly found to be flawed, followed by sampling and research specific bias. Among the seven studies which were found to be at lower risk of being flawed, five found no association between BMI and caries and two showed a positive association between these two variables.
Evidence of an association between BMI and caries was inconsistent. Based on the studies with a low risk lower risk of being flawed, a positive association between the variables of interest was found mainly in older children. In younger children, the evidence was equivocal. Longitudinal studies examining the association between different indicators of obesity and caries over the life course will help shed light in their complex relationship.
肥胖和年轻人的龋齿是公共卫生关注的问题。尽管多年来一直在研究这两种情况之间的关系,但迄今为止,结果仍然存在分歧。本文旨在通过系统综述已发表的文献,确定儿童和青少年的体重指数(BMI)与龋齿之间的关系性质。
系统检索了研究 BMI 与 18 岁以下个体龋齿之间关联的研究。检索了电子文献数据库 PubMed、MEDLINE、Embase、CINAHL、CENTRAL 和 Google Scholar。检查纳入研究的参考文献以确定其他潜在研究。使用经过验证的观察性研究方法评估清单评估内部和外部有效性以及报告质量。结果根据 14 个领域的缺陷风险进行分层,其中 10 个被认为是主要领域,4 个是次要领域。
在最初确定的 4208 项研究中,有 84 篇论文符合纳入标准并纳入综述;结论主要来自于 7 项低缺陷风险的研究。发现 BMI 和龋齿之间存在三种主要关联类型:26 项研究显示正相关,19 项研究显示负相关,43 项研究发现感兴趣的变量之间无关联。一些研究显示出不止一种关联模式。评估混杂因素是最常发现存在缺陷的领域,其次是抽样和研究特定偏差。在被认为低缺陷风险的七项研究中,有五项研究发现 BMI 和龋齿之间没有关联,有两项研究显示这两个变量之间存在正相关。
BMI 和龋齿之间存在关联的证据不一致。基于低缺陷风险的研究,主要在年龄较大的儿童中发现了这两个变量之间的正相关。在年龄较小的儿童中,证据存在争议。纵向研究检查肥胖的不同指标与一生中龋齿的关联将有助于阐明它们之间复杂的关系。