| Literature DB >> 21477320 |
Takashi Hanioka1, Miki Ojima, Keiko Tanaka, Keitaro Matsuo, Fumihito Sato, Hideo Tanaka.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Tooth loss impairs oral function. The aim of the present review was to evaluate the causal association between smoking and tooth loss on the basis of high-quality studies.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21477320 PMCID: PMC3087682 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-11-221
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Elements abstracted from searched studies
| Study | Elements |
|---|---|
| All studies | Citation and publication status |
| Study design: cross sectional or cohort study | |
| Participants: number, sex, age range, country, residency and representativeness | |
| Focal factor(s) with respect to the association with tooth loss: smoking only or various factors including smoking | |
| Factors entered in the final analytical model | |
| Type of the estimate of association, effect size and confidence interval | |
| Category of evaluated group: age group, sex and type of exposure | |
| Statistical significance of the dose-response relationship | |
| Special mention: sensitivity, subgroup and other types of analyses and the source of funding | |
| Cross sectional studies | Definition and prevalence of tooth loss |
| Cohort studies | Observational length and non-respondent and follow-up rates |
Characteristics of studies and evaluation of Newcastle-Ottawa Scale
| NOS | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study design | First author, year | Participants | Age range (years) | Definition of tooth loss | Focal point | Dose-response | Coding | Score |
| Cross-sectional study | Randolph, 2001 | 3,050 Mexican American | 65-99 | 15+ | F | NA | 011 11 1 | 5* |
| Klein, 2004 | 2,764 American | 53-96 | 1+ | F | NA | 011 11 1 | 5* | |
| Tanaka, 2005 | 1,002 Japanese pregnant women | 29.8 on average | 1+ | S | NA | 010 11 0 | 3 | |
| Hanioka, 2007 | 2,200 Japanese | 60-94 | Total tooth loss | S | NA | 101 10 1 | 4 | |
| Musacchio, 2007 | 1,226 Italian males | 65+ | Total tooth loss | S | NA | 101 11 1 | 5* | |
| Ojima, 2007 | 1,314 Japanese | 20-39 | 1+ | S | 3/4 levels | 111 01 1 | 5* | |
| Hanioka, 2007 | 3,999 Japanese | 40-94 | 9+ | S | 3/4 levels | 111 11 1 | 6* | |
| Mundt, 2007 | 2,501 German | 25-59 | 15th percentile | F | 3 levels | 111 11 1 | 6* | |
| Yanagisawa, 2009 | 547 Japanese males | 55-75 | 9+ | S | 3 levels | 110 11 0 | 4 | |
| Yanagisawa, 2010 | 1,088 Japanese males | 40-75 | 9+ | S | 3 levels | 110 11 0 | 4 | |
| Cohort study | Slade, 1997 | 693 Australian | 60+ | 2 years | F | NA | 10 01 110 | 4 |
| Krall, 2006 | 789 American males | 21-84 | 36 years | S | NA | 00 11 111 | 5* | |
| Okamoto, 2006 | 740 Japanese males | 30-59 | 4 years | S | 3 levels | 00 10 110 | 3 | |
| Dietrich, 2007 | 43,112 American male health professionals | 40-75 | 16 years | S | 5 levels | 01 11 111 | 6* | |
| Cunha-Cruz, 2008 | 12,264 American HMO members | 45-61 | 3 years | A | NA | 00 10 110 | 3 | |
Studies were conducted in Japan, the United States, Australia, Germany and Italy. A dose-response relationship was examined in 7 studies, and 8 studies (6 for cross-sectional and 2 for prospective cohort studies) were classified as high quality.
S, smoking; F, factors including smoking; A, systemic antibodies; *evaluated for high-quality methodology by the modified Newcastle-Ottawa Scale (NOS). One star each was given for six and seven items for cross-sectional and cohort studies, respectively, if the methodology of a study satisfied the criterion. The items were divided according to three categories of selection, comparability and exposure for cross-sectional studies and selection, comparability and outcome for cohort studies. When a study satisfied all criteria, the star column appears as 111 11 1 for cross-sectional and 11 11 111 for cohort studies. Studies with total scores of five or more, three or four, and two or less were evaluated as high-, moderate- and low-quality studies, respectively.
Figure 1Number of studies according to the processes of searching, selection and evaluation of literature. The searches yielded 496 citations. The initial screening identified 66 studies, and 51 studies were excluded. Finally, 8 high-quality studies were evaluated for the causal association.
Effect size of association, differences in prevalence and description of strength of association
| Association | Prevalence of tooth loss (%) | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type of exposure | First author, year | Sex | Effect size | Type | Current smoker | Non-smoker | Difference | Strength of association |
| Current smokers | Randolph, 2001 | M | 1.69 (1.31, 2.20) | OR | 50 | 41 | 9 | Moderate |
| Klein, 2004 | M, F | 4.04 (2.52, 6.49) | OR | 92.3 | 79.5 | 12.8 | Moderate | |
| Musacchio, 2007 | M, F | 4.01 (2.59, 6.20) | OR | 48.1** | 42.3** | 5.8** | Weak | |
| Ojima, 2007 | M | 2.21 (1.40, 3.50) | OR | 39.3 | 21.8 | 17.5 | Moderate | |
| Hanioka, 2007 | M | 2.24 (1.28, 3.94) | OR | 36.9 | 28.5 | 8.4 | Moderate | |
| Mundt, 2007 | M, F | 2.3 (1.6, 3.4)* | OR | 21.1** | 8.4** | 12.7** | Moderate | |
| Krall, 2006 | M | 2.1 (1.5, 3.1) | HR | Weak | ||||
| Dietrich, 2007 | M | 2.3 (2.1, 2.5)* | HR | Moderate | ||||
| Former smokers | Randolph, 2001 | M | 1.26 (1.04, 1.54) | OR | 45 | 41 | 4 | Weak*** |
| Klein, 2004 | M, F | 1.57 (1.25, 1.98) | OR | 85.8 | 79.5 | 6.3 | Weak*** | |
| Musacchio, 2007 | M, F | 3.42 (2.42, 4.82) | OR | 45.5** | 42.3** | 3.2** | Weak | |
| Ojima, 2007 | M | 1.25 (0.55, 2.86) | OR | 26.3 | 21.8 | 4.5 | NS*** | |
| Hanioka, 2007 | M | 1.55 (0.88, 2.74) | OR | 38.6 | 28.5 | 10.1 | NS*** | |
| Mundt, 2007 | M, F | 1.7 (1.0, 3.1)* | OR | 12.1** | 8.4** | 3.7** | NS*** | |
| Krall, 2006 | M | 1.3 (0.9, 1.7) | HR | NS*** | ||||
| Dietrich, 2007 | M | 1.2 (1.2, 1.3)* | HR | Weak*** | ||||
The evidence of weak to moderate association between smoking and tooth loss was consistent in high-quality studies, and the effect size was consistently smaller for former smokers than for current smokers.
CI, confidence interval; OR, odds ratio; HR, hazard ratio; *extracted from the category that included the median value of the group as a representative because the effect size for all current or all former smokers was not reported; **calculated by reviewer based on date in the table in the original literature; ***lower rank than current smokers
Relationship between exposure of smoking and effect size
| Author, year | Unit of exposure | Smoking status | Sex | Exposure | P for trend | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ojima, 2007 | Pack-years | Current | M | 1-9 | 10-19 | 20- | <0.0001 | |||
| Current | F | 1-9 | 10- | 0.0004 | ||||||
| Hanioka, 2007 | Pack-years | Current | M | 1-19 | 20-59 | 60- | <0.0001 | |||
| Current | F | 1-19 | 20-59 | 60- | <0.0001 | |||||
| Mundt, 2007 | Daily consumption | Current | M, F | 1-9 | 10-19 | 20- | NA | |||
| Former | M, F | 1-9 | 10-19 | 20- | NA | |||||
| Dietrich, 2007 | Daily consumption | Current | M | 1-4 | 5-14 | 15-24 | 25-34 | 35-44 | 45- | NA |
Trend of the relationship between the level of exposure and effect size was obvious in all studies.
*Not significant
Summary of results to evaluate the causal association between smoking and tooth loss
| Element | Description for consistency and study type | Evaluation of consistency | Evaluation of study type | Perceived shortcoming |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Strength of association | All studies reported significant associations based on effect size: moderate association in 5 CSSs, 1 PCS and 1 CSS for males; weak association in 1 PCS and 1 CSS for females. | Evidence for weak or moderate association based on effect size is strong. | Evidence for strength of association is convincing. | Not applicable |
| Natural experiment | All studies reported smaller effect size in former smokers than in current smokers. The association between former smoking and tooth loss relative to non-smokers was not significant in 3 CSSs and 1 PCS, and was significant in 3 CSSs and 1 PCS. The description of association in former vs. current smokers decreased in 4 CSSs, 2 PCSs and 1 CSS for males, and remained at the same level in 1 CSS and 1 CSS for females. The hazard ratio decreased based on years of abstinence in 2 PCSs. | Evidence for natural experiment is strong. However, this interpretation does not mean that the risk in former smokers is lesser than that in current smokers. | Evidence for natural experiment is probable. | Control group did not comprise current smokers, and only a relative relationship was evaluated. |
| Dose-response relationship | Trend of the relationship between level of exposure and effect size, i.e. odds ratio or hazard ratio, was obvious in 3 CSSs and 1 PCS. This trend was highly significant in 2 CSSs. | Evidence for the dose-response relationship is strong. This interpretation is limited to populations assessed in 3 countries. | Evidence for dose-response relationship is probable. | Findings pertain to limited populations and 1 PCS. |
Evaluation in each element was based on the consistency of findings and study types.
CSS: cross-sectional study, PCS: prospective cohort study