Department of Surgery, Medicine, Dentistry and Morphological Sciences with Transplant Surgery, Oncology and Regenerative Medicine Relevance (CHIMOMO), Unit of Dentistry & Oral-Maxillo-Facial Surgery, University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Modena, Italy.
PhD Program in Clinical and Experimental Medicine, Department of Biomedical, Metabolic and Neural Sciences, University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Modena, Italy.
Ann Ig. 2024 May-Jun;36(3):270-280. doi: 10.7416/ai.2024.2593. Epub 2024 Jan 17.
Dental caries is the most common infectious disease, affecting approximately 60 to 90% of the world population, especially young children, and disadvantaged communities. Due to the extremely high prevalence and the significant negative impact on general health, well-being, and quality of life it is considered a global public health problem. Despite the improvement of policies to promote oral health care in the past decades, dental caries is still a healthcare challenge, characterized by increasing disparities among different social groups between and within countries. Fluoride-based prevention of dental caries is a cost-effective approach, that has been implemented since 1940's. It includes systemic and topical administrations, through community-based or individual programs. Preventive interventions should be tailored to individual and community caries risk assessment and estimate of cumulative fluoride intake, in order to maximize the preventive effect and avoid the risk of potential adverse effects associated with excessive fluoride exposure. Regulation of public health policies plays a major role in this context.
Scoping review.
The aim of this scoping review was to report an overview of current guidelines regarding fluoride-based preventive strategies for dental caries and relevant policies on the matter, as well as to address current issues related to public health aspects of dental caries prevention. We searched for the relevant literature on the matter, focusing on policy documents, such as recommendations, position papers and guidelines, issued from the major scientific and regulatory institutions involved in oral health promotion and on publications concerning relevant aspects of public health law.
Prevention of dental caries through fluoride can rely on topical fluorides for home-use (toothpastes and mouthrinses), professionally applied topical fluorides (gels, varnishes, silver diamine fluoride, fluoride-releasing restorative materials and sealants), fluoride supplements (tablets and drops), and community-based strategies (community water fluoridation, fluoridated salt and milk). Current relevant guidelines for all these preventive aids are outlined in the paper. A significantly greater preventive effect of topical fluorides has been widely established in the recent past, as compared to systemic effects. Furthermore, increasing concerns have emerged on potential adverse effects on general health associated with early and excessive systemic exposure to fluoride, especially for children, supported by recent meta-analyses. Also, community water fluoridation has raised significant aspects of relevance for health law and policies. In a public health perspective, healthcare policymakers should tackle social iniquities by promoting information and oral health literacy, through community and school-based programs, ensuring access to early dental visits and basic dental care and improving availability and affordability of fluoride topical products. Conclusions. Fluoride-based prevention can provide a simple and cost-effective approach to reduce the incidence of dental caries and the associated social burden. Among fluoride-based preventive strategies, systemic community-based administration of fluoride should be considered with great caution, due to the unfavorable risk-benefit ratio currently established. Topical fluoridated pro-ducts are generally preferred, given the optimal risk-benefit ratio. Further efforts must be made to identify and tackle the barriers to dental caries prevention and related social iniquities from a public health perspective. Policies and laws on oral health should promote access to caries prevention with targeted comprehensive strategies.
龋齿是最常见的传染病之一,影响着全球约 60%至 90%的人口,尤其是幼儿和弱势群体。由于极高的发病率和对整体健康、幸福感和生活质量的重大负面影响,它被认为是一个全球公共卫生问题。尽管过去几十年来改善了促进口腔保健的政策,但龋齿仍然是一个医疗保健挑战,其特点是不同社会群体之间以及国家内部的差异日益扩大。基于氟化物的龋齿预防是一种具有成本效益的方法,自 1940 年代以来一直在实施。它包括通过社区或个人方案进行全身和局部管理。预防干预措施应根据个人和社区的龋齿风险评估以及累积氟化物摄入量的估计值进行调整,以最大程度地发挥预防效果并避免与过量氟化物暴露相关的潜在不良影响。公共卫生政策的监管在这方面发挥着重要作用。
范围审查。
本范围审查的目的是报告有关基于氟化物的龋齿预防策略的现行指南以及有关该问题的相关政策,并解决与龋齿预防的公共卫生方面相关的当前问题。我们搜索了相关文献,重点是政策文件,如主要参与口腔健康促进的科学和监管机构发布的建议、立场文件和指南,以及有关公共卫生法相关方面的出版物。
通过氟化物进行龋齿预防可以依靠家用的局部氟化物(牙膏和漱口液)、专业应用的局部氟化物(凝胶、涂料、银胺氟化物、释放氟化物的修复材料和密封剂)、氟化物补充剂(片剂和滴剂)以及社区为基础的策略(社区饮水氟化、氟化盐和牛奶)。本文概述了所有这些预防辅助工具的现行相关指南。最近的荟萃分析广泛证实,与全身效应相比,局部氟化物具有更显著的预防效果。此外,人们越来越关注早期和过量全身暴露于氟化物与一般健康相关的潜在不良影响,尤其是儿童,这一点得到了最近的荟萃分析的支持。此外,社区饮水氟化也引发了与健康法和政策相关的重要问题。从公共卫生的角度来看,医疗保健政策制定者应通过社区和学校为基础的方案来解决信息和口腔健康素养方面的社会不公问题,确保及早进行牙科访问和基本牙科护理,并改善氟化物局部产品的可及性和可负担性。结论。基于氟化物的预防可以提供一种简单且具有成本效益的方法来降低龋齿的发病率和相关的社会负担。在基于氟化物的预防策略中,由于目前建立的不利风险效益比,应谨慎考虑社区为基础的全身性氟化物管理。局部用氟化物产品通常是首选,因为它们具有最佳的风险效益比。必须进一步努力从公共卫生的角度确定和解决与龋齿预防和相关社会不公相关的障碍。口腔健康政策和法律应促进通过有针对性的综合战略获得龋齿预防。