Department of International and Community Oral Health, Tohoku University Graduate School of Dentistry, Sendai, Japan.
Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Radiology, Faculty of Dental Medicine, Universitas Airlangga, Surabaya, Indonesia.
J Dent Res. 2023 Jul;102(8):887-894. doi: 10.1177/00220345231164106. Epub 2023 Apr 21.
Social participation prevents social isolation and loneliness among older adults while having numerous positive effects on their health and well-being in rapidly aging societies. We aimed to estimate the effect of retaining more natural teeth on social participation among older adults in Japan. The analysis used longitudinal data from 24,872 participants in the Japan Gerontological Evaluation Study (2010, 2013, and 2016). We employed a longitudinal modified treatment policy approach to determine the effect of several hypothetical scenarios (preventive scenarios and tooth loss scenarios) on frequent social participation (1 = at least once a week/0 = less than once a week) after a 6-y follow-up. The corresponding statistical parameters were estimated using targeted minimum loss-based estimation (TMLE) method. Number of teeth category (edentate/1-9/10-19/≥20) was treated as a time-varying exposure, and the outcome estimates were adjusted for time-varying (income, self-rated health, marital status, instrumental activities of daily living, vision loss, hearing loss, major comorbidities, and number of household members) and time-invariant covariates (age, sex, education, baseline social participation). Less frequent social participation was associated with older age, male sex, lower income, low educational attainment, and poor self-rated health at the baseline. Social participation improved when tooth loss prevention scenarios were emulated. The best preventive scenario (i.e., maintaining ≥20 teeth among each participant) improved social participation by 8% (risk ratio [RR] = 1.08; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.05-1.11). Emulated tooth loss scenarios gradually decreased social participation. A hypothetical scenario in which all the participants were edentate throughout the follow-up period resulted in a 11% (RR = 0.89; 95% CI, 0.84-0.94) reduction in social participation. Subsequent tooth loss scenarios showed 8% (RR = 0.92; 95% CI, 0.88-0.95), 6% (RR = 0.94; 95% CI, 0.91-0.97), and 4% (RR = 0.96; 95% CI, 0.93-0.98) reductions, respectively. Thus, among Japanese older adults, retaining a higher number of teeth positively affects their social participation, whereas being edentate or having a relatively lower number of teeth negatively affects their social participation.
社会参与可预防老年人的社会孤立和孤独感,对他们在快速老龄化社会中的健康和幸福有诸多积极影响。我们旨在评估在日本,保留更多天然牙齿对老年人社会参与的影响。本分析使用了来自日本老年人评估研究(2010、2013 和 2016 年)24872 名参与者的纵向数据。我们采用纵向修正治疗政策方法,以确定几种假设情况(预防情况和牙齿缺失情况)对 6 年后频繁社会参与(1=每周至少一次/0=每周不到一次)的影响。使用基于目标最小损失估计(TMLE)的方法估计相应的统计参数。牙齿数量类别(无牙/1-9/10-19/≥20)被视为随时间变化的暴露,结果估计值针对随时间变化(收入、自我评估健康、婚姻状况、日常生活活动能力、视力丧失、听力丧失、主要合并症和家庭成员数量)和时间不变协变量(年龄、性别、教育程度、基线社会参与)进行了调整。较少的社会参与与年龄较大、男性、较低的收入、较低的教育程度和较差的自我评估健康相关。模仿牙齿脱落预防情况可改善社会参与度。最佳预防情况(即在每个参与者中保持≥20 颗牙齿)可使社会参与度提高 8%(风险比[RR] = 1.08;95%置信区间[CI],1.05-1.11)。模拟的牙齿脱落情况逐渐降低了社会参与度。假设所有参与者在整个随访期间都无牙,则社会参与度降低 11%(RR = 0.89;95%CI,0.84-0.94)。随后的牙齿脱落情况分别显示出 8%(RR = 0.92;95%CI,0.88-0.95)、6%(RR = 0.94;95%CI,0.91-0.97)和 4%(RR = 0.96;95%CI,0.93-0.98)的降低。因此,在日本老年人中,保留更多的牙齿数量会对其社会参与产生积极影响,而无牙或牙齿数量相对较少则会对其社会参与产生负面影响。