1 Centre for Oral Immunobiology and Regenerative Medicine, Centre for Oral Clinical Research, Institute of Dentistry, Queen Mary University London, London, UK.
2 Department of Oral Biology, School of Dental Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
J Dent Res. 2019 Jun;98(6):632-641. doi: 10.1177/0022034519842510.
The aim of this study was to systematically appraise the existing literature on the yet-unclear heritability of gingivitis and periodontitis. This review was conducted following the PRISMA guidelines. A search was conducted through the electronic databases Medline, Embase, LILACS, Cochrane Library, Open Grey, Google Scholar, and Research Gate, as complemented by a hand search, for human studies reporting measures of heritability of gingivitis and periodontitis. A total of 9,037 papers were initially identified from combined databases and 10,810 on Google Scholar. After full-text reading, 28 articles met the inclusion criteria and were carried forward to data abstraction. The reviewed data included information from >50,000 human subjects. Meta-analyses were performed by grouping studies based on design and outcome. Heritability ( H) of periodontitis was estimated at 0.38 (95% CI, 0.34 to 0.43; I = 12.9%) in twin studies, 0.15 (95% CI, 0.06 to 0.24; I = 0%) in other family studies, and 0.29 (95% CI, 0.21 to 0.38; I = 61.2%) when twin and other family studies were combined. Genome-wide association studies detected a lower heritability estimate of 0.07 (95% CI, -0.02 to 0.15) for combined definitions of periodontitis, increasing with disease severity and when the interaction with smoking was included. Furthermore, heritability tended to be lower among older age groups. Heritability for the self-reported gingivitis trait was estimated at 0.29 (95% CI, 0.22 to 0.36; I = 37.6%), while it was not statistically significant for clinically measured gingivitis. This systematic review brings forward summary evidence to confirm that up to a third of the periodontitis variance in the population is due to genetic factors. This seems consistent across the different studied populations and increases with disease severity. In summary, up to a third of the variance of periodontitis in the population is due to genetic factors, with higher heritability for more severe disease.
本研究旨在系统评价牙龈炎和牙周炎遗传度仍不明确的现有文献。本综述遵循 PRISMA 指南进行。通过电子数据库 Medline、Embase、LILACS、Cochrane 图书馆、Open Grey、Google Scholar 和 Research Gate 进行检索,并辅以手工检索,以查找报告牙龈炎和牙周炎遗传度衡量指标的人类研究。从联合数据库中最初确定了 9037 篇论文,在 Google Scholar 中确定了 10810 篇论文。经过全文阅读,有 28 篇文章符合纳入标准,并进行了数据提取。综述数据包括来自>50000 名人类受试者的信息。根据设计和结果对研究进行分组后进行荟萃分析。双胞胎研究中牙周炎的遗传度( H)估计为 0.38(95%CI,0.34 至 0.43;I = 12.9%),其他家族研究中为 0.15(95%CI,0.06 至 0.24;I = 0%),双胞胎和其他家族研究合并时为 0.29(95%CI,0.21 至 0.38;I = 61.2%)。全基因组关联研究检测到联合定义的牙周炎的遗传度估计值较低,为 0.07(95%CI,-0.02 至 0.15),随着疾病严重程度的增加和纳入吸烟的相互作用而增加。此外,遗传度在年龄较大的年龄组中往往较低。自我报告的牙龈炎特征的遗传度估计为 0.29(95%CI,0.22 至 0.36;I = 37.6%),而临床测量的牙龈炎则没有统计学意义。本系统综述提供了总结性证据,证实人群中牙周炎的变异有多达三分之一归因于遗传因素。这在不同的研究人群中似乎是一致的,并随着疾病严重程度的增加而增加。总之,人群中牙周炎的变异有多达三分之一归因于遗传因素,疾病越严重遗传度越高。