Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Graduate School of Medicine, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan.
Center for Genomic Medicine, Kyoto University Graduate School of Medicine, Kyoto, Japan.
J Dent Res. 2021 Apr;100(4):361-368. doi: 10.1177/0022034520969129. Epub 2020 Nov 6.
Previous evidence suggests the association of lower educational attainment and depressive symptoms with tooth loss. The hypothesis of this study was that these factors may exacerbate the effect on tooth loss beyond the sum of their individual effects. We aimed to clarify the independent and interactive effects of educational attainment and depressive symptoms on the number of missing teeth among community residents. Cross-sectional data of 9,647 individuals were collected from the general Japanese population. Dental examination was conducted by dentists. Educational attainment was categorized into 3 levels based on the number of educational years: ≤9, >9 to ≤12, and >12 y. The Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D) was used to assess depressive symptoms; a total score of ≥16 and/or the use of medications for depression indicate the presence of depressive symptoms. In the multivariate analysis with adjustment for conventional risk factors, educational attainment was identified as a determinant of the number of missing teeth (>9 to ≤12 y of education: coefficient = 0.199, 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.135 to 0.263, < 0.001; ≤9 y of education: coefficient = 0.318, 95% CI, 0.231 to 0.405, < 0.001: reference, >12 y of education). An analysis that included interaction terms revealed that the relationship between "≤9 y of education" and the number of missing teeth differed depending on the depressive symptoms, indicating a positive interactive association (coefficient for interaction = 0.198; 95% CI, 0.033 to 0.364, for interaction = 0.019: reference, >12 y of education). Our study suggests the presence of a significant association between educational attainment and tooth loss, as well as a partial interactive association between "≤9 y of education" and "depressive symptoms" in the general Japanese population.
先前的证据表明,教育程度较低和抑郁症状与牙齿缺失有关。本研究的假设是,这些因素可能会加剧牙齿缺失的影响,超出其各自影响的总和。我们旨在阐明教育程度和抑郁症状对社区居民牙齿缺失数量的独立和交互作用。从一般日本人群中收集了 9647 名个体的横断面数据。由牙医进行口腔检查。根据受教育年限将教育程度分为 3 个等级:≤9 年、>9 至≤12 年和>12 年。使用流行病学研究中心抑郁量表(CES-D)评估抑郁症状;总分≥16 分和/或使用抗抑郁药物表明存在抑郁症状。在调整了常规危险因素的多变量分析中,教育程度被确定为牙齿缺失数量的决定因素(>9 至≤12 年教育:系数=0.199,95%置信区间[CI],0.135 至 0.263, < 0.001;≤9 年教育:系数=0.318,95%CI,0.231 至 0.405, < 0.001:参考,>12 年教育)。包含交互项的分析表明,“≤9 年教育”与牙齿缺失数量之间的关系因抑郁症状而异,表明存在正交互关联(交互系数=0.198;95%CI,0.033 至 0.364, for interaction = 0.019:参考,>12 年教育)。我们的研究表明,在一般日本人群中,教育程度与牙齿缺失之间存在显著关联,以及“≤9 年教育”和“抑郁症状”之间存在部分交互关联。