Abed Hassan, Burke Mary, Fenlon Michael R, Scambler Sasha, Scott Suzanne E
Faculty of Dentistry, Oral and Craniofacial Sciences King's College London, London, UK.
Faculty of Dentistry, Department of Basic and Clinical Oral Sciences, Umm Al-Qura University, Makkah, Saudi Arabia.
Spec Care Dentist. 2020 Sep;40(5):475-487. doi: 10.1111/scd.12505. Epub 2020 Aug 10.
Teeth with a poor prognosis are often extracted prior to radiotherapy for head and neck cancer (HNC) in order to help prevent the need for dental treatment after radiotherapy that might in turn lead to the development of osteoradionecrosis. However, the details and impact of replacing missing teeth after radiotherapy for HNC have received little attention, especially from the patients' perspective.
This study aimed to assess the use, satisfaction, and impact of denture use following radiotherapy for HNC. The study also sought to determine patients' satisfaction with information about replacing their missing teeth postradiotherapy. Finally, this study also aimed to assess interest in replacing missing teeth for those who had not done so.
A structured, validated, and reliable questionnaire was sent to HNC patients who had received radiotherapy and had missing teeth at the time of discharge. In addition to demographic details and self-reported oral hygiene, the questionnaire included questions on use of (or interest in) dentures, satisfaction with dentures, satisfaction with information about replacing missing teeth, QoL as measured by two questions from the short version of WHOQoL-BREF, and oral functioning as measured by BCSQ-H&N. Demographic details and clinical details were extracted from the hospital records.
N = 80 (24%) returned a completed questionnaire. Participants had an average of 12 missing teeth (SD = 8.05). Most (n = 60, 75%) had not replaced their missing teeth. Of these, 35 (58%) were very or extremely interested in doing so. For HNC survivors who wore dentures, there was variable satisfaction and a number of side-effects of wearing dentures. Satisfaction with information about replacing missing teeth was low. There was no statistical difference in QoL or oral functioning between participants who wore dentures and participants who did not wear dentures. However, those with dentures reported fewer problems with carrying out daily routines as measured by the oral functioning tool.
QoL and oral functioning were similar regardless of denture use, highlighting reduced oral function in both those with and without dentures. In those who had not replaced their missing teeth, there was substantial interest in doing so and thus may be an unmet need. The dental team could offer HNC survivors more support after radiotherapy and following denture provision to improve information about denture use and increase satisfaction with dentures.
预后较差的牙齿通常在头颈部癌症(HNC)放疗前被拔除,以帮助预防放疗后可能导致放射性骨坏死的牙科治疗需求。然而,HNC放疗后缺失牙修复的细节和影响很少受到关注,尤其是从患者的角度。
本研究旨在评估HNC放疗后假牙的使用情况、满意度及影响。该研究还试图确定患者对放疗后缺失牙修复信息的满意度。最后,本研究还旨在评估未进行缺失牙修复者对修复的兴趣。
向接受过放疗且出院时存在缺失牙的HNC患者发送一份结构化、经过验证且可靠的问卷。除了人口统计学细节和自我报告的口腔卫生情况外,问卷还包括关于假牙使用(或兴趣)、对假牙的满意度、对缺失牙修复信息的满意度、通过世界卫生组织生存质量简表(WHOQoL-BREF)中的两个问题测量的生活质量以及通过头颈部癌症患者口腔功能问卷(BCSQ-H&N)测量的口腔功能等问题。人口统计学细节和临床细节从医院记录中提取。
80名(24%)患者返回了完整的问卷。参与者平均缺失12颗牙(标准差=8.05)。大多数(n=60,75%)未进行缺失牙修复。其中,35名(58%)对修复非常感兴趣或极其感兴趣。对于佩戴假牙的HNC幸存者,满意度各不相同,且佩戴假牙存在一些副作用。对缺失牙修复信息的满意度较低。佩戴假牙的参与者和未佩戴假牙的参与者在生活质量或口腔功能方面无统计学差异。然而,根据口腔功能工具测量,佩戴假牙者在日常活动中报告的问题较少。
无论是否使用假牙,生活质量和口腔功能相似,这突出表明佩戴假牙者和未佩戴假牙者的口腔功能均有所下降。在未进行缺失牙修复的人群中,对此有很大兴趣,因此这可能是一项未得到满足的需求。牙科团队可以在放疗后及提供假牙后为HNC幸存者提供更多支持,以改善关于假牙使用的信息并提高对假牙的满意度。