Yu Ju, Lin Bo, Zhang Zhanqiang, Chen Wanna, Lv Weiming, Zheng Liang
Department of Thyroid Surgery, The First Affiliated Hospital of Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou, Guangdong, China.
Department of Thyroid Surgery, The First Affiliated Hospital of Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou, Guangdong, China
BMJ Open. 2024 Dec 20;14(12):e087288. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-087288.
The study investigates the association between oral microbiome diversity and all-cause mortality.
Population-based cohort study.
US National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (2009-2010 and 2011-2012).
A total of 8224 participants who had valid data on the oral microbiome diversity and survival through 31 December 2019 were included in this study.
Oral microbiome diversity was measured using the observed number of amplicon sequence variant (ASV) and grouped into quartiles. Cox proportional hazards regression models were used to estimate the HR and 95% CI for all-cause mortality according to the quartiles of ASV number, adjusted for potential confounders.
Among the 8224 participants (mean (SD) age: 42.0 (15.1) years; 49.9% male; 37.2% white, 23.8% black, 27.2% Hispanic and 11.8% other race/ethnicity), the median follow-up time was 108 months (IQR, 95-120 months) and 429 (5.2%) deaths were identified. Participants with a higher ASV number were more likely to be poor, non-Hispanic black or Hispanic, uninsured and current smokers, more likely to have poor self-rated oral health and periodontitis and less likely to use dental floss. However, compared with the lowest quartile of the ASV number, a suggestive association was observed for the second quartile (HR=0.80, 95% CI: 0.60 to 1.08), a significant reduction in all-cause mortality was observed for the third (HR=0.55, 95% CI: 0.37 to 0.82) and the fourth (HR=0.58, 95% CI: 0.38 to 0.89) quartile. The dose-response association for all-cause mortality risk was curvilinear; the protective association plateaued when the number of ASVs was larger than 120.
Despite being linked to greater socioeconomic disadvantages and poorer oral health, higher oral microbiome diversity was significantly associated with a substantial reduction in all-cause mortality.
本研究调查口腔微生物群多样性与全因死亡率之间的关联。
基于人群的队列研究。
美国国家健康与营养检查调查(2009 - 2010年和2011 - 2012年)。
本研究纳入了8224名在口腔微生物群多样性和截至2019年12月31日的生存情况方面有有效数据的参与者。
使用扩增子序列变异(ASV)的观察数量来衡量口腔微生物群多样性,并将其分为四分位数。Cox比例风险回归模型用于根据ASV数量的四分位数估计全因死亡率的风险比(HR)和95%置信区间(CI),并对潜在混杂因素进行了调整。
在8224名参与者中(平均(标准差)年龄:42.0(15.1)岁;49.9%为男性;37.2%为白人,23.8%为黑人,27.2%为西班牙裔,11.8%为其他种族/族裔),中位随访时间为108个月(四分位间距,95 - 120个月),共确定429例(5.2%)死亡。ASV数量较高的参与者更可能贫困、是非西班牙裔黑人或西班牙裔、未参保且为当前吸烟者,更可能自我评估口腔健康状况较差且患有牙周炎,使用牙线的可能性较小。然而,与ASV数量最低的四分位数相比,第二四分位数观察到有提示性关联(HR = 0.80,95%CI:0.60至1.08),第三(HR = 0.55,95%CI:0.37至0.82)和第四(HR = 0.58,95%CI:0.38至0.89)四分位数全因死亡率显著降低。全因死亡风险的剂量反应关联呈曲线;当ASV数量大于120时,保护关联趋于平稳。
尽管与更大的社会经济劣势和较差的口腔健康有关,但较高的口腔微生物群多样性与全因死亡率的大幅降低显著相关。