| Literature DB >> 25657894 |
Jeffrey B Payne1, Lorne M Golub2, Geoffrey M Thiele3, Ted R Mikuls3.
Abstract
In this review, we critically evaluate the case-control studies examining the relationship between rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and periodontitis, two common chronic inflammatory diseases with a similar host-mediated pathogenesis. We review the "two-hit" periodontitis model that our group previously proposed, in which we elucidate how a systemic disease such as RA can potentially exacerbate or initiate periodontitis. Furthermore, we discuss adjunctive host modulation therapy, originally developed for periodontitis (i.e., subantimicrobial-dose doxycycline alone or in combination with an anti-inflammatory agent), to simultaneously mitigate RA and periodontitis. Finally, we review studies describing periodontal treatment effects on both RA disease activity measures and systemic inflammation. Current evidence suggests that an association exists between periodontitis and RA. Well-designed multicenter longitudinal clinical trials and studies with sufficient sample sizes are needed to ascertain the temporal relationship between these two diseases and whether periodontal treatment can reduce the severity of RA or prevent its onset.Entities:
Keywords: Alveolar bone loss; Case–control studies; Periodontitis; Rheumatoid arthritis; Subantimicrobial dose doxycycline
Year: 2015 PMID: 25657894 PMCID: PMC4312393 DOI: 10.1007/s40496-014-0040-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Oral Health Rep
Fig. 1A modified “two-hit” model of induction of severe chronic periodontitis by local and systemic factors, its relationship to RA, and their mitigation by periodontal host modulation therapy. The first “Hit” involves the periodontopathic microbial biofilm and its metabolic products, such as lipopolysaccharide/endotoxin, inducing a local inflammatory response characterized by increased production in the periodontium of, particularly, bone-resorptive cytokines (IL-1, IL-6, TNF-α) and tissue-destructive proteinases (MMP-8, MMP-9, MMP-13, and neutrophil elastase). The second “Hit” involves a medical disease associated with destructive periodontitis (e.g., RA) which, like chronic periodontitis, can induce systemic inflammation characterized by elevated levels of acute-phase proteins such as C-reactive protein and other biomarkers/mediators in the circulation (e.g., IL-1, IL-6, TNF-α, MMP-8, and MMP-9). “Therapeutic reduction” represents the clinical/biological response to SDD host modulation therapy, adjunctive to SRP. “Synergistic therapeutic reduction” represents the response to the combination of SDD plus an anti-inflammatory drug (e.g., flurbiprofen), adjunctive to SRP. This figure is a modification of one published by us previously [50]
Periodontitis Intervention Studies in Rheumatoid Arthritis Patients
| Study | Number of Patients and Periodontal Treatment | Design/Duration | Main Systemic Findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ribeiro et al. [ | RA Control: n = 16, OHI + Supragingival Cleaning RA Experimental: n = 26, OHI + Supragingival Cleaning + SRP | − Randomization not specified − 3 months | ↓ ESR in experimental group; No change in RF or HAQ |
| Al-Katma et al. [ | RA Control: n = 12, no treatment RA Experimental: n = 17, OHI + SRP | − Randomized − No intent-to-treat analysis (i.e., dropouts not included in analysis) − 8 weeks | ↓ ESR and DAS28 in experimental group compared with control group; No change in swollen or tender joint count, global well-being or morning stiffness |
| Pinho et al. [ | RA Control: n = 15, no periodontal treatment RA Control: n = 15, full mouth extraction, no follow-up visit RA Experimental: n = 15, SRP 2 additional groups, n = 15 each, without RA | − Non-randomized − 6 months | No differences at 6 months between RA groups in ESR or other acute phase reactants or DAS28 |
| Ortiz et al. [ | RA Control: n = 20, no periodontal treatment, half on anti-TNF-α RA Experimental: n = 20, SRP + OHI + half on anti-TNF-α | − Randomized − 6 weeks | ↓ DAS28, swollen and tender joints, global well-being, and TNF-α in group receiving periodontal treatment |
| Biyikoğlu et al. [ | Non-RA patients: n = 15 RA patients: n = 15 Both groups received OHI + SRP | − Per protocol analysis, not intent-to-treat (only 10 RA patients and 12 non-RA patients completed the study) − 6 months | ↓ DAS28 one month after SRP in RA patients, maintained at 3 and 6 months; ↓ CRP one month and three months after SRP; No change in RF, ESR |
| Erciyas et al. [ | RA patients with moderate-to-high DAS28 scores, n = 30 RA patients with low DAS28 scores, n = 30 Both groups received OHI + SRP | − 3 months | ↓ DAS28, ESR, CRP and TNF-α in both groups at 3 months |
| Okada et al. [ | RA Control: n = 29, no periodontal treatment RA Experimental: n = 26, OHI + supragingival scaling | − Randomized − 8 weeks | Greater ↓ in DAS28-CRP and serum IgG to |
Key: CCP Cyclic citrullinated peptide, CRP C-reactive protein, DAS28 Disease Activity Score (28 joints), ESR Erythrocyte sedimentation rate, HAQ Health Assessment Questionnaire, OHI Oral hygiene instructions, RF Rheumatoid factor, SRP Scaling and root planing, TNF-α Tumor necrosis factor-α