| Literature DB >> 21050499 |
Anneloes E Gerritsen1, P Finbarr Allen, Dick J Witter, Ewald M Bronkhorst, Nico H J Creugers.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: It is increasingly recognized that the impact of disease on quality of life should be taken into account when assessing health status. It is likely that tooth loss, in most cases being a consequence of oral diseases, affects Oral Health-Related Quality of Life (OHRQoL). The aim of the present study is to systematically review the literature and to analyse the relationship between the number and location of missing teeth and oral health-related quality of life (OHRQoL). It was hypothesized that tooth loss is associated with an impairment of OHRQoL. Secondly, it was hypothesized that location and distribution of remaining teeth play an important role in this.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21050499 PMCID: PMC2992503 DOI: 10.1186/1477-7525-8-126
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Qual Life Outcomes ISSN: 1477-7525 Impact factor: 3.186
PubMed search as used
| #1 | ("Quality of Life"[MeSH]) OR ("Patient Satisfaction"[MeSH]) |
|---|---|
| #2 | ("Denture, Partial"[MeSH]) OR ("Denture, Partial, Fixed"[MeSH]) OR ("Dental Implants"[MeSH]) OR ("Dental Implants, Single-Tooth"[MeSH]) OR ("Dental Prosthesis, Implant-Supported"[MeSH]) OR ("Osseointegration"[MeSH]) OR ("Dental Implantation"[MeSH]) |
| #3 | ("Jaw, Edentulous, Partially"[MeSH]) OR ("Tooth Loss"[MeSH]) |
| #4 | (#1 AND #2) |
| #5 | (#1 AND #3) |
| #6 | (#4 OR #5) |
PubMed search using MeSH terms
Exclusion criteria applied for eligibility assessment of full-text papers and number of exclusions
| Reason for exclusion (eligibility) | Number of studies excluded |
|---|---|
| Incomplete sample information | 10 |
| • Sampling method unclear | |
| • Age distribution not stated | |
| • Gender distribution not stated | |
| Insufficient methods (information) | 26 |
| • No clinical examination or validated 'self tooth count' form not used | |
| • Measure for satisfaction or OHRQoL not clearly described | |
| • Details of replacement not explicit | |
| OHRQoL outcomes not related to (management of) tooth loss | 73 |
| Mistakenly included on the basis of abstract | 20 |
| Total | 129 |
Figure 1Flow chart outlining the search strategy and results along various steps.
Summary of the 6 meta-analyses
| Comparison | Summary effect | 95% CI | p-value for heterogeneity test | Model used |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1-8 teeth | 3.37 | 1.37-5.38 | <0.001 | random effect |
| 9-16 teeth | 3.08 | 1.37-4.80 | <0.001 | random effect |
| 17-20 teeth | 1.89 | -0.03-3.82 | <0.001 | random effect |
| 21-24 teeth | 1.05 | 0.07-2.02 | <0.001 | random effect |
| Incomplete or < 25 teeth | 3.45 | 2.93-4.05 | 0.975 | fixed effect |
| ≤ 10 teeth | 2.01 | 1.43-2.83 | 0.962 | fixed effect |
| >10 and <21 teeth | 1.63 | 1.23-2.17 | 0.794 | fixed effect |
| 0-8 NOPs | 1.99 | 1.39-2.86 | 0.279 | fixed effect |
| 0-3 POPs | 1.66 | 1.16-2.37 | 0.808 | fixed effect |
| UAS | 1.82 | 0.68-4.87 | 0.025 | random effect |
| 0-19 teeth | 9.78 | 7.38-12.18 | 0.157 | fixed effect |
| 0-19 teeth | 4.56 | 3.67-5.44 | 0.912 | fixed effect |
Figure 2Synthesis of two studies presenting differences in mean OHIP total scores. Forest plots presenting differences in mean OHIP total scores of categories of number of present teeth for three samples (total n = 12,965) [25,43]. The category 25-32 teeth was used as reference. Relative box size indicates the weight of the study: (a) 1-8 teeth (heterogeneity Q = 16.75; df = 2), (b) 9-16 teeth (heterogeneity Q = 17.80; df = 2), (c) 17-20 teeth (heterogeneity Q = 22.06; df = 2), (d) 21-24 teeth (heterogeneity Q = 15.51; df = 2).
Figure 3Synthesis of two OHIP studies presenting Odds Ratio's. Forest plot presenting Odss Ratio's (OR) for having OHIP impacts (fairly/very often) of two categories of number of present teeth (incomplete vs. complete [26] and ≤ 24 vs. ≥ 25 [25]) in two samples (total n = 6821). Relative box size indicates weight of the study (heterogeneity Χ2 = 0,00; df = 1).
Figure 4Synthesis of three OIDP studies presenting Odds Ratio's. Forest plots presenting Odss Ratio's (OR) for having any impact on OIDP of three categories of number of present teeth in three samples (total n = 2204) [5,24,45]. Relative box size indicates weight of the study. (a) ≤ 10 vs. ≥ 21 (heterogeneity Χ2 = 0.08; df = 2), (b) >10 and < 21 vs. ≥ 21 teeth (heterogeneity Χ2 = 0.46; df = 2).
Figure 5Synthesis of two OIDP studies presenting Odds Ratio's in relation to occluding pairs and location. Forest plots presenting Odss Ratio's (OR) for having any impact on OIDP of two categories of number of natural occluding pairs (NOPs) and posterior occluding pairs (POPs) and unrestored anterior spaces (UAS) in two samples (total n = 1184) [5,45]. Relative box size indicates weight of the study. (a) NOPs 0-8 vs. 9-16 (heterogeneity Χ2 = 1.17; df = 1), (b) POPs 0-3 vs. 4-8 (heterogeneity Χ2 = 0.06; df = 1), (c) UAS yes vs. no (heterogeneity Χ2 = 5.03; df = 1).
Figure 6Synthesis of two studies presenting differences in mean GOHAI total scores. Forest plot presenting differences in mean GOHAI total scores between two categories of number of present teeth: 0-19 teeth vs. 20+ teeth in two samples (total n = 435) [38,46]. Relative box size indicates weight of the study (heterogeneity Q = 2.00; df = 1).
Figure 7Synthesis of two studies presenting differences in mean OHQoL-UK. Forest plot presenting differences in mean OHQoL-UK© total scores between two categories of numbers of present teeth: 0-19 teeth vs. 20 and more teeth in four samples (total n = 2738) described in two studies [31,35]. Relative box size indicates weight of the study (heterogeneity Q = 0.15; df = 3).
Summary of studies reporting on occluding pairs
| First author, year | Population, sample n, (% females) | Subject of the study | Main outcomes regarding occluding pairs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Baba, 2008aCS [ | Japanese adults with shortened dental arches | Relationship between shortened dental arches and OHRQoL | a: Dose response relationship between number of missing posterior teeth and OHRQoL in subjects with shortened dental arches. Missing posterior units is related to impairment of OHRQoL. |
| Hassel,2006CS [ | German institutionalized elderly | Dental and non-dental factors on OHRQoL of institutionalized elderly | Less teeth in static occlusion related to impairment of OHRQoL. |
| Locker, 1994LT [ | Canadian older adults | Clinical and subjective indicators of oral health status and OHRQoL | Having fewer functional units associated with impairment of OHRQoL. |
| Mesas, 2008CS [ | Brazilian urban elderly | Dental and non-dental factors on OHRQoL | Absence of posterior occlusion associated with impairment of OHRQoL but only statistically significant for 'physical' dimension and not for the 'social' and 'worry' dimensions. |
| Swoboda, 2006CS [ | American low income elderly | Dental and non-dental predictors on OHRQoL | OHRQoL positively related to the total number of occluding pairs, molar pairs occluding, anterior pairs occluding, and premolar pairs occluding. |
| Tsakos, 2006CS [ | British non-institutionalized elderly | Clinical correlates of OHRQoL | OHRQoL significantly related to the total number of occluding pairs and to the number of anterior occluding pairs but not to the number of posterior occluding pairs. |
| Tsakos, 2004CS [ | Greek non-institutionalized elderly | Relationship between clinical dental measures and OHRQoL | OHRQoL significantly related to the total number of occluding pairs and to the number of posterior occluding pairs. |
| Leake, 1994CS [ | American and Canadian older adults | Assessment of relationship between oral function and posterior dental units | Low number of posterior units was associated with embarrassment and dissatisfaction on chewing and appearance, indicating OHRQoL impairment. |
| Meeuwissen, 1995CS [ | Dutch dentate older adults | Satisfaction with reduced dentitions | Fewer posterior occluding units associated with lower satisfaction scores, indicating OHRQoL impairment. |
CS = cross-sectional study; LT = longitudinal study; CO = cohort study; VA = validation study
Summary of studies reporting the location of missing teeth
| First author, year | Population, sample n, (% females) | Subject of the study | Main outcomes regarding location of missing teeth |
|---|---|---|---|
| Walter, 2007CS [ | Canadian rural adults | Clinical and socio-demographic variables and OHRQoL | One or more natural posterior teeth missing not associated with OHRQoL impairment whereas one or more natural anterior teeth missing was associated with OHRQoL impairment. |
| Pallegedara, 2008CS [ | Sinhalese non-institutionalized elderly | Tooth loss, denture status and OHRQoL | 'Presence of anterior spaces' more negative impact on the OHRQoL than 'missing posterior teeth'. |
| Swoboda, 2006CS [ | American low income elderly | Dental and non-dental predictors on OHRQoL | Comparable impact on OHRQoL of the number of molar pairs occluding, premolar pairs occluding and anterior pairs occluding. |
| Tsakos, 2004CS [ | Greek non-institutionalized elderly | Relationship between clinical dental measures and OHRQoL | Having 'unfilled anterior spaces' more impact on OHRQoL than having few (0-3) posterior occluding pairs. |
| Tsakos, 2006CS [ | British non-institutionalized elderly | Clinical correlates of OHRQoL | Having few anterior occluding pairs (0-2) more impact on OHRQoL than having few posterior occluding pairs (0-3). |
CS = cross-sectional study; LT = longitudinal study; CO = cohort study; VA = validation study