Ying Yue, Nicolau Belinda, Van Hulst Andraea, Henderson Mélanie, Madathil Sreenath Arekunnath, Barnett Tracie A
Faculty of Dental Medicine and Oral Health Sciences, McGill University, Montreal, Québec, Canada,
Faculty of Dental Medicine and Oral Health Sciences, McGill University, Montreal, Québec, Canada.
Caries Res. 2025 Jun 9:1-10. doi: 10.1159/000546747.
Leveraging data from a cohort study of Quebec youth with a family history of obesity, this study aimed to (i) identify neighbourhood socio-environmental typologies in childhood and (ii) estimate their associations with the incidence of dental caries in adolescence.
We used baseline (2005-2008) and second follow-up (2012-2015) data from the ongoing QUALITY cohort study in Montreal, Canada, which included 512 children aged 8-10 years with ≥1 biological parent with obesity at baseline. Based on prior literature and data availability, we selected three key neighbourhood-level indicators - social disorder, social deprivation, and material deprivation - measured in both school and residential settings. Latent class analysis was used to derive the socio-environmental typologies by combining social disorder, social deprivation, and material deprivation of the social environment in school and residential neighbourhoods. The outcome was dental caries incidence, assessed as the change in the Decayed, Missing, Filled Surface index. Negative binomial regression was performed to estimate incidence ratios (IRs) and corresponding 95% confidence intervals (CIs).
Only three neighbourhood socio-environmental typologies were identified. Type 1 neighbourhoods: high social disorder, high social deprivation, and low material deprivation; type 2 neighbourhoods: median social disorder, median social deprivation, and median material deprivation; type 3 neighbourhoods: low social disorder, low social deprivation, and high material deprivation. Compared to type 1, the IRs (95% CIs) were 0.9 (0.6-1.2) for type 2 and 0.8 (0.6-1.1) for type 3.
Neighbourhoods with lower social disorder and social deprivation may offer a protective effect against dental caries in youth.
本研究利用一项针对有肥胖家族史的魁北克青少年的队列研究数据,旨在(i)确定儿童时期邻里社会环境类型,以及(ii)评估它们与青少年龋齿发病率的关联。
我们使用了加拿大蒙特利尔正在进行的QUALITY队列研究的基线数据(2005 - 2008年)和第二次随访数据(2012 - 2015年),该研究纳入了512名8 - 10岁的儿童,他们在基线时至少有1名亲生父母患有肥胖症。基于先前的文献和数据可得性,我们选择了三个关键的邻里层面指标——社会失序、社会剥夺和物质剥夺,这些指标在学校和居住环境中均有测量。通过结合学校和居住社区社会环境中的社会失序、社会剥夺和物质剥夺情况,使用潜在类别分析来得出社会环境类型。结果变量为龋齿发病率,通过龋失补牙面指数的变化来评估。进行负二项回归以估计发病率比(IRs)和相应的95%置信区间(CIs)。
仅识别出三种邻里社会环境类型。1型社区:高社会失序、高社会剥夺和低物质剥夺;2型社区:中等社会失序、中等社会剥夺和中等物质剥夺;3型社区:低社会失序、低社会剥夺和高物质剥夺。与1型相比,2型的IRs(95% CIs)为0.9(0.6 - 1.2),3型为0.8(0.6 - 1.1)。
社会失序和社会剥夺程度较低的社区可能对青少年龋齿有预防作用。