Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Graduate School of Public Health and Health Policy, City University of New York, New York, NY; Department of Epidemiology, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC.
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Graduate School of Public Health and Health Policy, City University of New York, New York, NY.
Ann Epidemiol. 2019 Jul;35:73-80.e2. doi: 10.1016/j.annepidem.2019.03.006. Epub 2019 May 8.
Variations in the oral microbiome are potentially implicated in social inequalities in oral disease, cancers, and metabolic disease. We describe sociodemographic variation of oral microbiomes in a diverse sample.
We performed 16S rRNA sequencing on mouthwash specimens in a subsample (n = 282) of the 2013-2014 population-based New York City Health and Nutrition Examination Study. We examined differential abundance of 216 operational taxonomic units, and alpha and beta diversity by age, sex, income, education, nativity, and race/ethnicity. For comparison, we examined differential abundance by diet, smoking status, and oral health behaviors.
Sixty-nine operational taxonomic units were differentially abundant by any sociodemographic variable (false discovery rate < 0.01), including 27 by race/ethnicity, 21 by family income, 19 by education, 3 by sex. We found 49 differentially abundant by smoking status, 23 by diet, 12 by oral health behaviors. Genera differing for multiple sociodemographic characteristics included Lactobacillus, Prevotella, Porphyromonas, Fusobacterium.
We identified oral microbiome variation consistent with health inequalities, more taxa differing by race/ethnicity than diet, and more by SES variables than oral health behaviors. Investigation is warranted into possible mediating effects of the oral microbiome in social disparities in oral and metabolic diseases and cancers.
口腔微生物组的变化可能与口腔疾病、癌症和代谢疾病的社会不平等有关。我们描述了多样化样本中口腔微生物组的社会人口统计学差异。
我们对 2013-2014 年基于人群的纽约市健康和营养检查研究的一个亚组(n=282)的漱口液标本进行了 16S rRNA 测序。我们通过年龄、性别、收入、教育、出生地和种族/民族检查了 216 个操作分类单元的差异丰度以及 alpha 和 beta 多样性。为了比较,我们还检查了饮食、吸烟状况和口腔健康行为的差异丰度。
69 个操作分类单元因任何社会人口统计学变量而存在差异(错误发现率<0.01),包括 27 个因种族/民族而异,21 个因家庭收入而异,19 个因教育而异,3 个因性别而异。我们发现 49 个因吸烟状况而异,23 个因饮食而异,12 个因口腔健康行为而异。因多个社会人口统计学特征而不同的属包括乳杆菌属、普雷沃氏菌属、卟啉单胞菌属、梭杆菌属。
我们确定了与健康不平等一致的口腔微生物组变化,因种族/民族而异的分类群多于饮食,因社会经济地位变量而异的分类群多于口腔健康行为。有必要调查口腔微生物组在口腔和代谢性疾病以及癌症的社会差异中的可能中介作用。