Centre for Oral Immunobiology & Regenerative Medicine and Centre for Oral Clinical Research, Institute of Dentistry, Barts and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry, Queen Mary University London (QMUL), London, UK.
Periodontology Unit, University College London Eastman Dental Institute, London, UK.
J Periodontal Res. 2020 Aug;55(4):574-580. doi: 10.1111/jre.12745. Epub 2020 Mar 31.
Evidence suggests that periodontitis has a negative effect on the quality of life of an individual, with increased impacts by greater disease severity. The aim of this study was to assess the association between quality of life and the presence of different severity and forms of periodontitis (aggressive and chronic), compared to a disease-free control group.
Four hundred and seventy one study participants were classified according to periodontal diagnosis using the 1999 Consensus Classification into chronic periodontitis (CP), aggressive periodontitis (AgP) and periodontally healthy. Oral health-related quality of life was assessed using the OHIP-14 questionnaire. Outcomes consisted of the prevalence of oral impacts reported occasionally, fairly often or very often (OFOVO) as well as fairly often or very often (FOVO), OHIP-14 total and domain scores. Logistic and linear regression analyses were carried out to test associations between periodontal diagnosis and quality of life outcomes, adjusted for smoking, age, ethnicity and body mass index.
Over 90% of periodontitis patients reported at least one oral impact experienced occasionally, fairly often or very often (OFOVO) compared with 53.8% of periodontally healthy controls (P < .001). After adjustment for covariates, significant differences were found between the periodontitis groups and healthy controls for OHIP-14 outcome scores (P < .001) and across all of the OHIP-14 domains (P < .005). These differences were clinically meaningful as they were higher than the measurement errors. No significant differences were identified between AgP and CP in adjusted analysis when comparing OHIP-14 scores.
Patients with periodontitis have worse quality of life than periodontally healthy individuals, with differences being clinically meaningful. AgP patients reported worse OHRQoL overall compared to CP patients, but these moderate and meaningful differences were explained through the adjustment process.
有证据表明,牙周炎会降低个体的生活质量,且疾病严重程度越高,影响越大。本研究旨在评估与无疾病对照组相比,不同严重程度和形式的牙周炎(侵袭性和慢性)与生活质量之间的关联。
471 名研究参与者根据 1999 年共识分类的牙周诊断标准分为慢性牙周炎(CP)、侵袭性牙周炎(AgP)和牙周健康。采用 OHIP-14 问卷评估口腔健康相关生活质量。结果包括偶尔、经常或非常频繁(OFOVO)和经常或非常频繁(FOVO)报告的口腔影响的患病率,以及 OHIP-14 总分和各领域得分。采用逻辑和线性回归分析,调整吸烟、年龄、种族和体重指数后,检验牙周诊断与生活质量结果之间的关联。
超过 90%的牙周炎患者报告至少有一项口腔影响偶尔、经常或非常频繁(OFOVO),而牙周健康对照组为 53.8%(P<0.001)。调整协变量后,牙周炎组与健康对照组在 OHIP-14 结局评分(P<0.001)和所有 OHIP-14 领域(P<0.005)方面存在显著差异。这些差异具有临床意义,因为它们高于测量误差。调整分析时,AgP 和 CP 之间在 OHIP-14 评分方面无显著差异。
与牙周健康个体相比,牙周炎患者的生活质量更差,差异具有临床意义。总体而言,AgP 患者的 OHRQoL 报告较差,但通过调整过程解释了这些中度和有意义的差异。