AIM: To investigate the effect of different definitions of periodontitis, using partial-mouth measurements instead of full-mouth ones, and unmeasured confounders on periodontitis’ associations with diabetes and cardiovascular disease (CVD).
METHODS: Adults 30-79 years with ≥1 or ≥2 teeth in the 2009-2014 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey for study 1 or 2, respectively. For study 1: periodontitis was defined using different thresholds while for study 2: it was defined using the CDC/AAP 2007 categorical definition and continuous measures were estimated using mean clinical attachment loss (CAL), Estimates of periodontitis were derived based on the full-mouth protocol and three partial-mouth protocols (PMPs), including the Ramfjörd teeth, the Community Periodontal Index for Treatment Needs teeth, and the random half-mouth. Effects of exposure and outcome misclassification of periodontitis were evaluated in relation to diabetes. Diabetes and CVD were ascertained using self-report. Percent relative bias (%RB) was calculated by comparing the odds ratios/beta estimates obtained from the full-mouth and PMPs. Study 3 used the dental longitudinal study to look at the effects of simulated unmeasured confounders on survival analysis in the periodontitis-diabetes/CVD and diabetes-periodontitis associations.
RESULTS: For study 1: the effects of clinical severity on the odds ratios were association dependent. Clinical measures and extent did not depend on the association. For study 2: percent relative bias was generally less than 10% for the severe categories while it tended to exceed 10% for moderate categories. Mean clinical attachment loss resulted in minimal bias. For study 3: presence of one source of unmeasured confounding (one confounder) showed that the diabetes-periodontitis association was robust to it unlike the periodontitis-diabetes/CVD associations.
CONCLUSION: These sources played a role in the periodontitis-diabetes, periodontitis-CVD, and diabetes-periodontitis associations. The associations were affected differently by each source. Some of these sources of systematic errors may change the conclusions of the associations. / 2021-10-10
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:bu.edu/oai:open.bu.edu:2144/37098 |
Date | 06 August 2019 |
Creators | Alshihayb, Talal |
Contributors | Heaton, Brenda |
Source Sets | Boston University |
Language | en_US |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Thesis/Dissertation |
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