Impact of periodontitis treatment on type 2 diabetes.

Summarised from:

Systemic effects of periodontitis treatment in patients with type 2 diabetes: a 12 month, single-centre, investigator-masked, randomised trial.
(The Lancet – Diabetes & Endocrinology; doi: 10.1016/S2213-8587(19)30036-1)

Authors:

Francesco D’Aiuto, Nikolaos Gkranias, Devina Bhowruth, Tauseef Khan, Marco Orlandi, Jean Suvan, Stefano Masi, Georgios Tsakos, Steve Hurel, Aroon D Hingorani, Nikos Donos, John E Deanfield, TASTE Group

Summarised by:

Dr Varkha Rattu

Research Topic:

Background + Aims

  • The global rise in type 2 diabetes is a significant contributor to disability and early mortality, often due to vascular and renal complications. Chronic inflammation affects glycaemic control in diabetes, linking it with cardiovascular and kidney diseases. Periodontitis, a prevalent inflammatory condition often co-existing with diabetes, involves an imbalance in oral bacteria and elicits a systemic inflammatory response, raising risks for severe conditions like cardiovascular disease and renal failure. Periodontal therapy aims to manage inflammation through dental cleaning, oral hygiene advice, and possible surgical intervention.
  • Prior studies have shown that periodontal treatment can reduce systemic inflammatory markers and improve vascular function. Short-term studies in patients with diabetes reported modest HbA1c reductions post-treatment. This study hypothesises that effective periodontitis treatment can further improve glycaemic control by reducing local and systemic inflammation.
  • This study aims to explore whether effective periodontal treatment in type 2 diabetes patients improves metabolic control. In those who are at high risk of cardiovascular and renal complications, the study aimed to investigate the effect of periodontal treatment on these bodily functions.

Materials + Methods

  • This 12-month, single-centre, investigator-masked trial assessed the impact of intensive periodontal therapy (IPT) on type 2 diabetes patients, comparing it with standard dental care (control periodontal treatment (CPT)).
  • Participants were recruited from London hospitals and general medical or dental practices, had type 2 diabetes for over six months, moderate-to-severe periodontitis (≥20 teeth affected by probing pocket depth (PPD) >4mm and alveolar bone loss >30%) and at least 15 teeth. Exclusions included uncontrolled systemic diseases other than diabetes and chronic drug treatments affecting periodontal health.
  • Participants were randomly assigned to IPT or CPT. They received either comprehensive subgingival scaling, surgical interventions (for IPT), or supragingival scaling and polishing (for CPT). Both groups were treated by 2 dental hygienists, 2 dentists and 3 periodontists.
  • Periodontal measurements were taken at baseline and at each study visit: PPD, recession, full mouth bleeding score (FMBS), and full mouth plaque scores (FMPS).
  • Other clinical measurements were taken at baseline and at each study visit, such as tobacco exposure. Blood pressure, height, body weight, waist circumference, body fat mass, fasting blood samples (measured the concentrations of glucose, standard lipid fractions, and insulin, C-reactive protein (CRP), inflammatory markers, endothelial cell surface markers were measured by multiplex assay), ultrasound imaging to assess endothelium-dependent and endothelium-independent flow-mediated dilation.
  • The primary outcome assessed was the change in HbA1c at 12 months, with secondary outcomes measuring changes in glucose, lipid profiles, and kidney function.
  • Results were analysed using multilevel linear regression, adjusting for baseline variables and patient characteristics.

Results

The study included 264 eligible type 2 diabetes patients with moderate-to-severe periodontitis. At baseline, groups were similar in cardiometabolic profiles. At 12 months:

  • The IPT group showed a 0.6% greater reduction in HbA1c levels compared to CPT (p<0.0001), significant improvements in periodontal health, and reduced systemic inflammation (CRP and TNFα levels).
  • IPT patients exhibited enhanced vascular function (flow-mediated dilation) and kidney health (eGFR).
  • Improvements in periodontal parameters correlated with better glycemic control, inflammation, and vascular function.
  • The IPT group also reported a higher quality of life, especially in terms of self-confidence and working life.

Limitations

  • There may be potential influence from non-diabetes medications, as CPT and IPT groups differed in baseline use of aspirin, β-blockers, and angiotensin-II blockers. While post-hoc analyses in patients not using these medications still showed HbA1c reductions in the IPT group, medication effects cannot be fully ruled out.
  • Conducting future studies with various cardiometabolic drugs would be beneficial.
  • Recruitment bias is possible, though efforts to reduce it included drawing participants from both hospital and primary-care centres.
  • Only patients with moderate-to-severe periodontitis were treated over 12 months, which may limit generalisability.
  • Caution is advised when applying these results broadly to all type 2 diabetes patients.

Conclusion

  • This study demonstrates that periodontal treatment can improve glycemic control, vascular health, and quality of life in patients with type 2 diabetes, potentially impacting diabetic complications like cardiovascular and kidney disease.
  • Over 12 months, IPT significantly lowered HbA1c, fasting glucose and inflammatory markers compared to control periodontal therapy.
  • Correlations between periodontal improvements and systemic health benefits reinforce the link between oral health and diabetes management. These findings suggest that periodontal care may complement traditional diabetes treatments.
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Research  |  24.10.18

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Periodontitis is the 6th most prevalent condition globally

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Periodontitis and diabetes are bidirectionally linked

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Diabetic complications are increased if you have both diseases

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Successful periodontal treatment can improve blood glucose control

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Successful periodontal treatment can improve blood glucose control

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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

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