Acute-phase response in periodontal treatment in type 2 diabetes.

Summarised from:

Acute-phase response following one-stage full-mouth versus quadrant non-surgical periodontal treatment in subjects with comorbid type 2 diabetes: A randomised clinical trial.
(Journal of Clinical Periodontology; doi: 10.1111/jcpe.13760)

Authors:

Filippo Graziani, Stefano Gennai, Crystal Marruganti, Marina Peric, Lorenzo Ghiadoni, Urska Marhl, Morena Petrini

Summarised by:

Dr Varkha Rattu

Research Topic:

Background + Aims

  • Periodontal treatment involves a stepwise framework, including non-surgical sub-gingival instrumentation as the cornerstone for managing periodontitis. This reduces gingival inflammation, probing pocket depth (PPD), and clinical attachment loss (CAL) while improving overall health and quality of life. However, non-surgical treatment can induce an acute-phase systemic inflammatory reaction post-operatively, including increased acute-phase proteins, endothelial dysfunction, elevated body temperature, clotting tendencies, and renal function reduction.
  • In systemically healthy individuals, an acute-phase systemic inflammatory reaction is likely to have no long-term health consequences, but its impact on individuals with comorbidities may be of concern. Quadrant-based treatment, with shorter clinical sessions, has been shown to avoid systemic inflammation compared to the one-stage full-mouth approach.
  • This study aimed to compare full-mouth versus quadrant non-surgical treatment on 24-hour post-operative CRP levels in periodontitis patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM).

Materials + Methods

  • This single-centre, randomised controlled trial (RCT) compared full-mouth (FM-SRP) and quadrant (Q-SRP) non-surgical periodontal treatments in subjects with type 2 diabetes and periodontitis.
  • Participants aged 18–70 with type 2 diabetes, periodontitis (≥3 mm attachment loss in ≥2 teeth), and ≥20% dentition with ≥5 mm probing depth were enrolled. Exclusions included pregnancy, systemic diseases (other than diabetes), recent medications, or prior periodontal treatment.
  • Patients were randomised into either FM-SRP in a single session or Q-SRP across three weeks. Both groups received oral hygiene instructions and subgingival instrumentation performed by a single periodontist.
  • Primary outcomes included changes in C-reactive protein (CRP) levels at 24 hours (day 1), with secondary measures assessing periodontal health, quality of life (OHIP-14), and endothelial function (flow-mediated dilation (FMD)).
  • Blood samples and vital signs were collected pre and post-treatment.
  • Statistical analysis used regression models to adjust for confounders such as age, BMI, and smoking.
  • Sample size calculations aimed to detect CRP differences with 90% power, resulting in 20 participants per group.

Results

  • Of 327 screened individuals, 40 were enrolled and completed follow-up. Participants were predominantly male, obese, and non-smokers, with no significant baseline differences between FM-SRP and Q-SRP groups.
  • Both treatment protocols significantly improved periodontal health, reducing pocket depth, plaque, and bleeding on probing (BOP) at Day 90, with no inter-group differences.
  • The FM-SRP group exhibited significantly higher CRP and IL-6 levels on Day 1 compared to the Q-SRP group (p < .05), and CRP increases correlated with longer treatment times (R = 0.53, p < .01).
  • HbA1c levels significantly decreased in both groups by Day 90, but the reduction was nearly twice as high in the Q-SRP group (HbA1c reduction= 1.59 vs. 0.8, p = .04). No significant changes were observed in lipid profiles, blood pressure, heart rate, or temperature.
  • Endothelial function worsened in the FM-SRP group, with a greater decline in FMD at day 1 compared to the Q-SRP group (p = .04).
  • Both groups improved oral health-related quality of life (OHIP-14) at day 90 without significant differences.
  • A linear regression model showed that higher day 1 CRP increases and FM-SRP treatment were associated with smaller HbA1c reductions at day 90, highlighting potential systemic implications of acute inflammatory responses.

Limitations

  • The observed CRP difference at day 1 (1.22 mg/L) was smaller than hypothesised (3.5 mg/L), potentially reducing statistical power, though post hoc calculations showed >90% power.
  • Elevated baseline CRP levels in diabetic participants may have masked inter-group differences.
  • Intermediate follow-ups between Day 1 and Day 90 were not performed, limiting insights into progressive inflammatory responses.
  • Surrogate markers like CRP and flow-mediated dilation (FMD) have inherent variability and challenging clinical applications.
  • HbA1c changes were only assessed over 3 months, leaving longer-term effects unclear.

Conclusion

  • FM-SRP may result in higher acute systemic inflammation and endothelial dysfunction compared to quadrant treatment, with reduced glycated haemoglobin improvement. Quadrant periodontal treatment may be preferred for patients with periodontitis and T2DM, offering greater glycated haemoglobin reduction by minimising immediate post-operative inflammation.
Read the full article Back to Research

Research  |  22.01.23

clock icon 6 mins to read

Share this page:

Copy Link

You might also like...

Events

Oral Health Challenges Among People Living With Diabetes

Dr Antoniszczak will present a lecture about the oral health challenges among people living with diabetes. This lecture explores the key challenges faced by individuals living with diabetes, focusing on…

Read more

Events

Periodontitis-Diabetes Hub x #DiabetesChat

Hosted by #diabeteschat, join Dr Varkha Rattu and the team behind the Periodontitis-Diabetes Hub for an insightful discussion exploring the importance of managing periodontitis and diabetes.

Read more

Events

Oral Health Challenges Among People Living With Diabetes

Dr Antoniszczak will present a lecture about the oral health challenges among people living with diabetes. This lecture explores the key challenges faced by individuals living with diabetes, focusing on the relationship between diabetes and oral health.

Read more

Events

Periodontitis-Diabetes Hub x #DiabetesChat

Hosted by #diabeteschat, join Dr Varkha Rattu and the team behind the Periodontitis-Diabetes Hub for an insightful discussion exploring the importance of managing periodontitis and diabetes.

Read more
icon1 services

Periodontitis is the 6th most prevalent condition globally

icon1 services

Periodontitis and diabetes are bidirectionally linked

icon1 services

Diabetic complications are increased if you have both diseases

icon1 services

Successful periodontal treatment can improve blood glucose control

icon1 services

Successful periodontal treatment can improve blood glucose control

icon1 services

Periodontitis is the 6th most prevalent condition globally

icon1 services

Periodontitis and diabetes are bidirectionally linked

icon1 services

Diabetic complications are increased if you have both diseases

icon1 services

Successful periodontal treatment can improve blood glucose control

icon1 services

Successful periodontal treatment can improve blood glucose control

Our Team

Team - The Periodontitis-Diabetes Hub

Dr Varkha Rattu

Founder & Periodontology Co-Lead

Team - The Periodontitis-Diabetes Hub

Dr Amar Puttanna

Diabetes Co-Lead

Team - The Periodontitis-Diabetes Hub

Dr Rajeev Raghavan

Diabetes Co-Lead

Team - The Periodontitis-Diabetes Hub

Professor Mark Ide

Periodontology Co-Lead

Team - The Periodontitis-Diabetes Hub

Professor Luigi Nibali

Periodontology Co-Lead

Team - The Periodontitis-Diabetes Hub

Dr Dominika Antoniszczak

Education & Support Advisor

Team - The Periodontitis-Diabetes Hub

Dr Jasmine Loke

Clinical Content Advisor

Team - The Periodontitis-Diabetes Hub

Dr Mira Shah

Patient Resource Advisor

Team - The Periodontitis-Diabetes Hub

Elaine Tilling

Outreach & Communications Lead

Team - The Periodontitis-Diabetes Hub

Dr Varkha Rattu

Periodontitis-Diabetes Hub Position: Founder & Periodontology Co-Lead

Team - The Periodontitis-Diabetes Hub

Dr Amar Puttanna

Periodontitis-Diabetes Hub Position: Diabetes Co-Lead

Team - The Periodontitis-Diabetes Hub

Dr Rajeev Raghavan

Periodontitis-Diabetes Hub Position: Diabetes Co-Lead

Team - The Periodontitis-Diabetes Hub

Professor Mark Ide

Periodontitis-Diabetes Hub Position: Periodontology Co-Lead

Team - The Periodontitis-Diabetes Hub

Professor Luigi Nibali

Periodontitis-Diabetes Hub Position: Periodontology Co-Lead

Team - The Periodontitis-Diabetes Hub

Dr Dominika Antoniszczak

Periodontitis-Diabetes Hub Position: Education and Support Advisor

Team - The Periodontitis-Diabetes Hub

Dr Jasmine Loke

Periodontitis-Diabetes Hub Position: Clinical Content Advisor

Team - The Periodontitis-Diabetes Hub

Dr Mira Shah

Periodontitis-Diabetes Hub Position: Patient Resource Advisor

Team - The Periodontitis-Diabetes Hub

Elaine Tilling

Periodontitis-Diabetes Hub Position: Outreach and Communications Lead

View All