| Literature DB >> 30360358 |
Ismo T Räisänen1, Anna Maria Heikkinen2, Eva Siren3, Taina Tervahartiala4, Dirk-Rolf Gieselmann5, Gerrit-Jan van der Schoor6, Peter van der Schoor7, Timo Sorsa8.
Abstract
Traditional periodontal disease diagnostics are based mainly on clinical examination and radiographs. They assess only past tissue destruction and provide no information on the current disease status or its future progression. The objective is to find out if an active matrix metalloproteinase-8 (aMMP-8) point-of-care (PoC) test could provide a cost-effective way to get around this limitation. This cross-sectional study used 47 adolescents and 70 adults, who were clinically examined and their aMMP-8 PoC tested. The aMMP-8 PoC test results and patients' treatment need, based on the community periodontal index of treatment needs (CPITN), were compared and analyzed using Fisher's exact test. In terms of CPITN, the aMMP-8 PoC test gave no false positives for both adolescents and adults. All healthy patients got a negative test result, while a positive test result indicated periodontal treatment need correctly. Finally, there was a significant association between a patient's aMMP-8 PoC test result and his/her treatment need (p = 0.001 for adolescents, p = 0.001 for adults). In conclusion, more accurate diagnostics of periodontal diseases' activity and progression using an aMMP-8 PoC test may help to reduce oral health care costs by reducing patient overtreatment, improving patient outcome, and reducing the need for complex periodontal therapy.Entities:
Keywords: matrix metalloproteinases; periodontal diseases; periodontitis; point-of-care testing
Year: 2018 PMID: 30360358 PMCID: PMC6315514 DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics8040074
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagnostics (Basel) ISSN: 2075-4418
Figure 1Distribution of the aMMP-8 point-of-care (PoC)/chairside test results according to patients’ treatment need, determined by a patient’s highest CPITN score found in six sextants [9,10]. Percentage of positive and negative test results per CPITN score groups is displayed over each column. (a) Adolescents, n = 47 (aged 15–17, described by Heikkinen et al. [11]). (b) Adults, n = 70 (aged 27–88, collected from the database of 15,000 patients of Finnish dental health care company called Oral Hammaslääkärit). TS− = aMMP-8 PoC test negative, TS+ = aMMP-8 PoC test positive, CPITN = community periodontal index of treatment needs.