Nationwide study on severe periodontitis and diabetes association

Summarised from:

Cross-sectional association between severe periodontitis and diabetes mellitus: A nationwide cohort study.
(Journal of Clinical Periodontology; doi: 10.1111/jcpe.13937)

Authors:

Eduardo Montero, Rocío Bujaldón, Eduard Montanya, Alfonso L. Calle-Pascual, Gemma Rojo-Martínez, Luis Castaño, Josep Franch-Nadal, Elías Delgado, Felipe Chaves, Bettina Alonso, Mariano Sanz, David Herrera

Summarised by:

Dr Varkha Rattu

Research Topic:

Background + Aims

  • Diabetes mellitus (DM) is a global health concern, affecting 537 million people worldwide and accounting for 10% of healthcare expenditure in developed countries.
  • DM increases the risk of periodontitis, with poor glycaemic control tripling the risk of severe periodontitis. Conversely, periodontitis worsens glycaemic control, heightening complications in patients with DM and increasing HbA1c levels over time. Severe periodontitis also poses a risk of developing type 2 DM in non-diabetic individuals. Early diagnosis and periodontal treatment have been demonstrated to be crucial for improving metabolic control and reducing complications. Non-surgical periodontal therapy (NSPT) has been shown to mitigate tooth loss and microvascular issues in DM patients.
  • Validated self-reported questionnaires offer a time- and cost-effective method for assessing periodontitis prevalence.
  • This study evaluates the association between severe periodontitis and DM using a validated questionnaire in a representative Spanish population sample.

Materials + Methods

  • Baseline data were collected between 2008 and 2010 using random cluster sampling from 100 primary healthcare centres, involving 5,072 participants selected from the National Health System registries. A re-evaluation of the same population was conducted between 2016 and 2017 to determine diabetes incidence.
  • Participants attended a single visit at their health centres, where data collection included structured questionnaires, oral health questionnaires (an 8-question questionnaire), physical examinations, blood sampling, and oral glucose tolerance tests (OGTT). The questionnaire captured demographic data, health behaviours, medical history, and dietary patterns. Physical assessments included weight, height, waist/hip circumference, and blood pressure, while blood analyses measured glucose, lipid profiles, and HbA1c.
  • Diabetes was diagnosed if fasting plasma glucose (FPG) ≥126 mg/dL, 2-hour post-load plasma glucose (PG) ≥200 mg/dL, HbA1c ≥6.5%, or there was known glucose-lowering medication used.
  • Prediabetes was defined by FPG 100–125 mg/dL (impaired fasting glucose), 2-hour post-load PG 140–199 mg/dL (impaired glucose tolerance), or HbA1c 5.7%–6.4%.
  • For 231 participants, periodontal examinations were conducted by blinded periodontists, measuring clinical attachment loss (CAL), probing pocket depth (PPD), and bleeding on probing (BOP).
  • Validated algorithms combining self-reported data, demographics, and risk factors predicted severe periodontitis prevalence.
  • Statistical analyses included chi-squared tests, t-tests, and ordinal logistic regression, adjusted for confounders such as age, sex, BMI, smoking, diet, and physical activity.

Results

  • Of the 1,751 participants who completed the oral health questionnaire in 2016–2017, 144 new DM cases (8.2%) and 280 prediabetes cases (16.6%) were identified.
  • Severe periodontitis prevalence varied depending on the criteria used: 59.0% (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)/ American Academy of Periodontology (AAP), 54.7% (≥50% of teeth with CAL ≥5 mm), and 68.8% (≥25% of teeth with PPD ≥6 mm).
  • Severe periodontitis was more common in participants with prediabetes or DM compared to normoglycemic individuals (p < .001).
  • Subjects with severe periodontitis were older, had higher BMI, and more often presented central obesity, hypertension, dyslipidemia, and cardiovascular events than those without severe periodontitis (all p < .001). They also had lower physical activity levels and a higher prevalence of coronary events, stroke and peripheral vascular disease.
  • Logistic regression showed that severe periodontitis was significantly associated with DM. Adjusted models indicated the strongest association using the ≥50% CAL ≥5 mm criteria, with an odds ratio (OR) of 4.9 (95% CI: 2.24–10.72, p < .001).

Limitations

  • Severe periodontitis was defined using algorithms based on self-reported information, demographics, and risk factors, with clinical validation performed on a subset of participants. While the algorithms demonstrated good accuracy (AUC ≥0.75), they cannot fully replace full-mouth clinical assessments.
  • Additionally, periodontal conditions were assessed only during the 2016–2017 follow-up, limiting the ability to determine if periodontitis developed after diabetes onset between 2008–2010 and 2016–2017. The analysis was cross-sectional, restricting the findings to associations without establishing causation between diabetes and periodontitis.

Conclusion

  • This large-scale study shows that severe periodontitis is an independent risk indicator for type 2 diabetes in a European population.
  • The findings emphasise the need for periodontal health assessments in managing diabetes risk.
Read the full article Back to Research

Research  |  23.12.23

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Periodontitis is the 6th most prevalent condition globally

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Diabetic complications are increased if you have both diseases

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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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