| Literature DB >> 31540277 |
Rafael Scaf de Molon1, Carlos Rossa2, Rogier M Thurlings3, Joni Augusto Cirelli2, Marije I Koenders3.
Abstract
The association between rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and periodontal disease (PD) has been the focus of numerous investigations driven by their common pathological features. RA is an autoimmune disease characterized by chronic inflammation, the production of anti-citrullinated proteins antibodies (ACPA) leading to synovial joint inflammation and destruction. PD is a chronic inflammatory condition associated with a dysbiotic microbial biofilm affecting the supporting tissues around the teeth leading to the destruction of mineralized and non-mineralized connective tissues. Chronic inflammation associated with both RA and PD is similar in the predominant adaptive immune phenotype, in the imbalance between pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines and in the role of smoking and genetic background as risk factors. Structural damage that occurs in consequence of chronic inflammation is the ultimate cause of loss of function and disability observed with the progression of RA and PD. Interestingly, the periodontal pathogen Porphyromonas gingivalis has been implicated in the generation of ACPA in RA patients, suggesting a direct biological intersection between PD and RA. However, more studies are warranted to confirm this link, elucidate potential mechanisms involved, and ascertain temporal associations between RA and PD. This review is mainly focused on recent clinical and translational research intends to discuss and provide an overview of the relationship between RA and PD, exploring the similarities in the immune-pathological aspects and the possible mechanisms linking the development and progression of both diseases. In addition, the current available treatments targeting both RA and PD were revised.Entities:
Keywords: alveolar bone loss; bone; bone resorption; periodontal disease; periodontitis; rheumatoid arthritis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31540277 PMCID: PMC6769683 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20184541
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Possible biological intersections between rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and periodontal disease (PD): Common risk/predisposing factors and reciprocal biological influences. The exposure to certain environmental factors, e.g., smoking, genetic background (HLA-DRB1-SE), gut microbiome, infection with P. gingivalis and more recently with A. actinomycetemcomitans (microbial dysbiosis) leads to local protein alteration by citrullination. In combination with an inflammatory process stimulated by macrophages, dendritic cells, and T cells, a host response to citrullinated proteins in predisposed patients will occur. Immune cells will produce proinflammatory mediators (Interleukins (ILs), Prostaglandins (PGs), Tumor Necrosis Factor (TNF), and metalloproteinases (MMPs), which also contribute to the aggravation of the immune response. IL-17, an important cytokine of the Th17 induces the production of CXC chemokines, MMPs, and reactive oxygen species (ROS), as well as the osteoblast expression of the receptor activator of the factor nuclear kappa B ligand (RANK-L) that stimulate osteoclast activation. Stimulated lymphocytes (B and T cells, specifically Th1 and Th17) play an important function during bone resorption by means of the RANKL-dependent mechanism in both conditions. P. gingivalis infection lead to the activation of proteases and peptidylarginine deiminase (PPADs) that generates citrullinated proteins and triggers the synthesis of anti-citrullinated proteins antibodies (ACPAs). A resultant signal against citrullinated epitopes in the joints resulting in enhanced expression of the rheumatoid factor (RF) and ACPAs, assisting in the formation of immune complexes. A. actinomycetemcomitans lead to the hypercitrullination of neutrophils and result in the activation of citrulline enzymes, which are also involved in the breakdown of the immune tolerance to the host molecules. These immune complexes enhance the host inflammatory development, which may aggravate RA. In addition, the autoantibodies produced during this process might contribute to the inflammatory process by directly activating osteoclast and resulting in the bone and cartilage damage. Thus, citrullination may represent a biological mechanism bridging reciprocal influences between RA and PD.
Figure 2The pathogenesis of the periodontal disease. A dysbiotic microbiome localized in the enamel surface of the tooth, below the gingival margin, initiate the innate immunity by stimulating resident cells (epithelial cells, periodontal ligament fibroblast, and gingival fibroblast and dendritic cells) to produce mediators of inflammation in response to bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) (via the toll-like receptor). Resident cells located in the connective tissue and alveolar bone produce proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines, including (Tumor Necrosis Factor- α (TNF-α), Interleukin-1 β (IL-1β), IL-6, IL-8, IL-12, IL-17 and the receptor activator of the factor nuclear kappa B ligand (RANK-L). Microorganisms located in the biofilm can reach the connective tissue and goes toward the alveolar bone, leading to the expression of RANK-L by osteoblasts, which can be accounted for the bone resorption seen during the disease process. If the infection fails to resolve, the release of pro-inflammatory mediators will continue and the activation of the B and T cells initiates the adaptive immunity. In this stage, the connective tissue become infiltrated by lymphocytes with predominantly more B cells (RANK-L) than T cells. The T cells will produce TNF-α, RANK-L and IL-17 which lead to increased osteoclastogenesis and bone resorption. This will result in the clinical signs of the disease characterized by increased clinical attachment loss (CAL.).
Figure 3The pathogenesis of rheumatoid arthritis. The innate immune process is characterized by the infiltration of several inflammatory cells, chemokines, as well as other inflammatory mediators into the joint. Rheumatoid factor (RF) and anti-citrullinated proteins antibodies (ACPAs), the two most important autoantibodies, are typically produced by plasma cells. The coordinated production of proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines play crucial role in the orchestration of the inflammatory responses that ultimately result in the cartilage and bone destruction. Macrophages, synovial fibroblast, and dendritic cells produce several pro-inflammatory mediators such as Interleukins (IL-1, IL-2, IL-6, IL-10, IL-13, IL-15, IL-17, IL-18, Tumor Necrosis Factor- α (TNF-α), Granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), and metalloproteinases (MMPs). In addition, the T cells activation leads to overproduction of inflammatory cytokines, including TNF-a, IL-1b, and IL-6 by macrophages. The overexpression of inflammatory cytokines enhances the capacity to induce the production of RANKL, which is the main regulator of osteoclastogenesis. These cells of the innate immune system hold extensive proinflammatory, destructive, and remodeling capacities, and substantially contribute to inflammation and joint destruction in RA.
Figure 4Potential initiators of immune-mediated inflammatory conditions at distant sites. A briefly description of the extra-articular potential initiators that might account for the pathogenesis of rheumatic diseases. Patients at high risk to develop autoimmune arthritis are more prone to infections due to endogenous (dysfunctional immune system) and external factors, i.e., periodontal disease and the presence of P. gingivalis and A. actinomycetemcomitans that trigger citrullinated peptides; exposure to risk factors such as smoke and pollutants might lead to the production of neutrophils extracellular traps (NEToses) and anti-citrullinated proteins antibodies (ACPA) in the lung; and the gut dysbiosis that also lead to the ACPA production. For patients at high risk to develop rheumatoid arthritis (RA), meticulous examining for infectious foci, particularly in the intestine and mouth, should be advocated in order to allow their early recognition and eradication.
Evidence table summarizing the main outcomes of clinical trials evaluating the RA treatment in patients with established PD.
| Study | Country | Patient Number | Objective | Study Design | Findings | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jung et al. (2018) [ | Korea | 64 | To evaluate the adjunctive effect of DMARDs in response to NSPT in RA patients. | Prospective clinical trial. All patients received NSPT and only the RA-PD group received DMARDs. Periodontitis indices (probing depth, CAL, GI, and BOP) were evaluated at the baseline and four weeks later. | Four weeks after NSPT, the periodontal indices (probing depth reduction, and CAL gain) were significantly different in the RA group treated with DMARDs compared to the systemically healthy patients. | The study provides clinical evidence that DMARDs may have an adjunctive effect on response to NSPT in patients with RA. |
| Ziebolz et al. (2018) [ | Germany | 168 | To investigate clinical periodontal findings in patients with RA under immunosuppressive rheumatic medications. | Cross-sectional study. Patients with RA treated with different immunosuppressive medications were involved. Periodontal parameters (probing depth, BOP and CAL) was measured. | RA medication was associated with periodontal inflammation, without differences in PD severity. | Based upon their mechanisms of action and efficacy in the reduction of systemic inflammation associated with RA-related medications, they have varying effects on periodontal inflammation. |
| Romero-Sanches et al. (2017) [ | Colombia | 177 | To evaluate the effects of conventional drug treatment and anti-TNF therapy in patients with RA on microbiological and periodontal condition. | Prospective clinical trial. RA patients under anti-TNF therapy and under DMARD were involved. Periodontal evaluation (BOP, CAL, probing depth) and rheumatologic markers (ACPA, RF, DAS28, ESR and CRP) were measured. | The anti-TNF therapy with methotrexate resulted in lower extension of CAL. Increased ACPAs titers were associated with the presence of periodontal pathogens. BOP was associated with elevated CRP levels, and ESR was associated with a greater probing depth. | RA treatment affect the clinical condition and subgingival microbiota. |
| Ayravainen et al. (2017) [ | Finland | 124 | To evaluate the role of antirheumatic medication in the periodontal health. | Prospective follow up clinical trial. RA patients treated with synthetic DMARD; patients with chronic RA treated with biological DMARDs. Degree of PD (probing depth, BOP and CAL) and clinical RA status (DAS28) were measured. | Periodontal status in patients with RA was worse compared to the population controls. Almost 80% of patients with synthetic DMARDs and 85% of patients with biological DMARDs suffered from PD compared to 40% of the controls. | There was no association between antirheumatic treatment and periodontal parameters. |
| Kobayashi et al. (2015) [ | Japan | 60 | To compare the periodontal condition in patients with RA and PD before and after treatment with the anti-human IL-6 receptor (IL-6R) monoclonal antibody (Tocilizumab—TCZ) and anti-TNF therapy. | Longitudinal case control study. Patients with RA-PD treated with TCZ and patients with RA-PD who received the anti-TNF were involved. Clinical periodontal (GI, CAL, BOP and probing depth) and rheumatologic assessments (DAS28 and CRP) were assessed at the baseline and three and six months later. | Decreased levels of GI, BOP, and probing depth in patients with RA-PD after medication with anti-IL6 and anti-TNF were observed. Both therapies decreased DAS28, CRP, the number of tender and swollen joints, and serum levels of ACPA, RF, CRP, and MMP-3. | Anti-IL6 therapy significantly decreased the levels of periodontal inflammation in patients with RA-PD. |
| Coat et al. (2015) [ | France | 21 | To evaluate the efficacy of rituximab in the periodontal parameters of patients with RA. | A cross-sectional and longitudinal study. Patients were divided in two groups: Group 1 received two doses of rituximab and group 2 received more than two courses of rituximab. The periodontal status (BOP, GI, CAL and probing depth) were measured. | Significant decrease in the probing depth and CAL were observed after six months of treatment with rituximab in group 1. Patients from group 2 presented better periodontal status than patients from group 1 before treatment with rituximab. | Anti-IL6 therapy could be beneficial to improve PD. |
| Kobayashi et al. (2014) [ | Japan | 20 | To assess the effect of the anti-TNF inhibitor (adalimumab), on the periodontal condition of patients with RA and to compare the serum protein profiles before and after therapy. | Prospective clinical trial. Patients with RA under the adalimumab treatment were included. Periodontal indices (GI, BOP, CAL and probing depth) and rheumatologic scores (DAS28-CRP) were measured. | A significant decrease in GI, BOP, probing depth, DAS28-CRP, and serum levels of TNF-α and IL-6 after adalimumab therapy were evidenced. | These findings might suggest a promising effect of adalimumab therapy on the periodontal condition of patients with RA. |
| Ustun et al. (2013) [ | Turkey | 16 | To evaluate the effects of host modulation with the anti-TNF therapy in periodontal tissues of patients with RA. | Longitudinal clinical trial. RA individuals were included, and periodontal indices (BOP, CAL, GI, and probing depth), GCF samples of IL-1β, IL-8 and MCP-1, and arthritis parameters (DAS28, CRP, and ESR) were measured at the baseline and 30 days after. | A decrease in the GCF volume, as well as IL-1β, IL-8, and MCP-1 levels in RA patients on the anti-TNF therapy was observed compared to the baseline. Probing depth and CAL of all patients remained unchanged. After 30 days of the anti-TNF therapy, CRP, ESR and DAS28 values were significantly lower compared to the baseline. | Host modulation might alter biochemical parameters of the periodontium in PD patients even without NSPT. |
| Mayer et al. (2013) [ | Israel | 58 | To evaluate the effect of autoimmune diseases (AD) treated with anti-TNF on the clinical and immunologic parameters of the periodontium. | Observational clinical trial. Patients with AD were enrolled (12 RA; 12 psoriatic arthritis; 12 systemic sclerosis patients). Ten RA patients were at the anti-TNF therapy (RA+) and 12 were systemically health individuals (H). the periodontal indices (GI, BOP, CAL and probing depth) and TNF-α levels were measured. | No differences were found among the AD groups in clinical and immunologic parameters. GI was increased in the AD patients compared to the H and RA+ groups. Significantly more BOP and decreased probing depth in the SD groups were observed compared to H and RA+. Increased levels of TNF-α in the AD groups were seen compared to H and RA+. | Patients with AD diseases presented with worse PD and higher TNF-α levels than the H controls. Anti-TNF-α treatment appears to hinder this scenario. |
| Savioli et al. (2012) [ | Brazil | 18 | To evaluate the influence and the evolution of PD in RA patients treated with anti-TNF-α. | Longitudinal and prospective clinical. RA patients on the anti-TNF treatment were included. Periodontal assessment (GI, BOP, CAL and probing depth) and rheumatologic evaluation (DAS28, ESR, and CRP) were measured at the baseline and six months later. | Eight out of 18 patients were diagnosed with PD. Periodontal indices were stable in the entire group throughout the experimental period. Significant improvement in all rheumatologic parameters were evidenced after six months of treatment with anti-TNF. This improvement was restricted to the individuals without PD. | PD patients did not improve rheumatologic parameters. Underlying PD may affect TNF blockers efficacy in patients with RA. |
| Mayer et al. (2009) [ | Israel | 30 | To investigate the influence of the anti-TNF-α therapy on the clinical and immunologic parameters of the periodontium. | Longitudinal clinical study including 10 subjects with RA receiving anti-TNF-α; 10 RA patients without biological DMARD and 10 health control. Periodontal parameters (GI, BOP, CAL and probing depth) were measured as well as levels of TNF-α in GCF and DAS28. | The anti-TNF- α therapy decreased the GCF levels of TNF-α and lead to milder PD (decreased probing depth and CAL) compared to the RA patients who did not receive this medication. Rheumatologic markers (DAS28, CCP and RF) were similar between groups receiving or not receiving the medication. | Anti-TNF-α agents may halt periodontal inflammation and bone resorption. |
| Pers et al. (2008) [ | France | 40 | To investigate the beneficial effects of anti-TNF-α in RA patients with coexisting PD. | Cross sectional and longitudinal study. Patients were divided into: RA patients that had already started treatment at the time of periodontal examination and RA patients that were evaluated before treatment. | A significant decrease in CAL was observed in RA patients receiving anti-TNF-α. On the other hand, increased gingival inflammation was evidenced in patients under the infliximab therapy with the coexisting PD. | Blocking the TNF-α activity may help in the treatment of PD. |
| Miranda et al. (2007) [ | Brazil | 34 | Aiming at comparing the inflammatory activity in the GCF of RA patients and to evaluate the effect of the RA treatment on PD | Cross sectional observational study. Seventeen patients were RA positive and the other half were health control. IL-1β, -18 and the elastase activity were measured. RA patients were under NSAID medication. | Significantly lower amounts of IL-1β and elastase activity in RA individuals were observed when compared to the health control. | The NSAID treatment taken by RA patients might influence the PD status by decreasing inflammatory mediators commonly seen during the PD progression. |
Disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs), Non-Surgical Periodontal Treatment (NSPT), Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA), Periodontal Disease (PD), Clinical Attachment Loss (CAL), Gingival Index (GI), Bleeding on Probing (BOP), Tumor Necrosis Factor (TNF), Anti-citrullinated proteins antibodies (ACPA), Rheumatoid Factor (RF), Disease Activity Score including 28-joint count (DAS28), Erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), C-Reactive Protein (CRP), Interleukin (IL), Tocilizumab (TCZ), Metalloproteinase (MMP), systemically diseased (SD), Health (H), Rheumatoid Arthritis positive patients (RA+).
Evidence table summarizing the main outcomes of clinical trials evaluating the effects of nonsurgical periodontal treatment (NSPT) in patients with active RA.
| Study | Country | Patient Number | Objective | Study Design | Findings | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cosgarea et al. (2019) [ | Romania | 36 | To evaluate the effect of NSPT in patients with RA and PD. | Prospective, case-controlled trial. The RA-PD group and the PD group were treated with scale and root planning (SRP). At the baseline and at three and six months after SRP the periodontal status and RA disease activity were measured. | RA patients presented a statistically significant decrease in the serum-CRP at three months. At all time-points, levels of inflammatory markers in GCF were higher in the RA-PD than in PD patients. | Only tendencies to reduction of DAS28 were observed after three and six months after NSPT. |
| Kaushal et al. (2019) [ | India | 40 | To evaluate the effects of NSPT on the RA disease activity. | Prospective clinical trial. PD and RA parameters were examined at the baseline and eight weeks following NSPT. | Significant reduction in PI, GI, PPD, CAL and DAS28 scores were observed in patients that received NSPT compared to the untreated patients. The serum levels of ACPA, RF and CRP were not different between groups. | NSPT improved the RA disease activity and periodontal clinical conditions. |
| Monsarrat et al. (2019) [ | France | 22 | To assess the effects of NSPT on the clinical and biochemical parameters of the RA disease activity and quality of life. | Open-label randomized clinical trial. Patients were allocated to immediate and delayed NSPT. The DAS28-ESR and health assessment questionnaire were employed. The PD and RA parameters were examined three months following NSPT. | NSPT did not lead to a significant reduction of the DAS28-ESR scores in RA patients with PD. Improvement in all periodontal parameters were evidenced after NSPT. | No improvement of the quality of life after NSPT was noted. No beneficial effect of NSPT was observed on patients with active RA. |
| Zhao et al. (2018) [ | China | 64 | To investigate the effects of NSPT on RA. | Prospective clinical study. Patients were divided into four groups: PD patients, RA, RA-PD, and healthy controls. PD and RA parameters were examined at the baseline and one month following NSPT. | The RA-PD group had significantly higher levels of CRP, ACPA, ESR, and DAS28 than those in the RA group. | NSPT lead to improvement of rheumatologic parameters in RA-PD patients. RA showed little effect on accelerating the development of PD. |
| Yang et al. (2018) [ | Taiwan | 31 | Aiming at investigating the effect of NSPT on the serum levels of RA-related inflammatory markers in patients with PD. | Prospective clinical trial. Patients were treated with NSPT and the serum levels of ACPA, RF, TNF-α, CRP, IL-1β, and IL-6 were measured at the end of the treatment. | NSPT significantly reduced the levels of ACPA and TNF-α in the serum of PD patients. A positive correlation was noted between the number of extracted teeth and the reduction of ACPA and IL-1β after NSPT. | RA-clinical parameter might be improved after NSPT. |
| Balci Yuce et al. (2017) [ | Turkey | 53 | To evaluate proinflammatory cytokine and vitamin D levels in RA and PD patients before and after NSPT. | Controlled, parallel-group clinical trial. Patients were treated with NSPT and levels of vitamin D, TNF-α, OPG, and RANKL in GCF and serum were measured. | After NSPT, the levels of 25-hydroxy-vitamin D were reduced in RA-PD patients. RANKL and TNF-α levels in RA patients decreased after NSPT. | Significant improvements in clinical parameters after NSPT in both RA and PD patients were observed. |
| Kurgan et al. (2017) [ | Turkey | 45 | To evaluate the effect of NSPT on clinical parameters and GCF levels of t-PA and PAI-2 in patients with PD, with or | Prospective clinical trial evaluating T-PA, PAI-2, CRP, DAS28, ESR and periodontal parameters were measured at the baseline and three months after NSPT. | All periodontal clinical parameters were significantly higher in the RA-PD and PD groups compared with the control group. NSPT significantly reduced the GCF t-PA levels in the RA-PD group. | NSPT significantly improves clinical periodontal parameters both in RA-PD and in the PD patients. |
| Kurgan et al. (2016) [ | Turkey | 66 | To evaluate whether NSPT influences the levels of MMP-8, IL-6 and PGE2 in the GCF, and serum levels of RA biomarkers in patients with RA-PD. | Observational clinical trial. Patients were evaluated at the baseline and after three months of NSPT. | The GCF levels of MMP-8, PGE2 and IL-6 were higher in all groups than the control. After NSPT, there were significant decreases in the GCF levels of MMP-8, PGE2 and IL-6 from patients with RA-PD. | NSPT may provide beneficial effects on local inflammatory mediators via decreases in the GCF of inflammatory biomarkers. |
| Bıyıkoglu et al. (2013) [ | Turkey | 30 | To evaluate clinical and biochemical outcomes of NSPT on the serum and GCF in PD patients with or without RA. | Single-centered interventional study. Clinical and biochemical periodontal (IL-1β, and TNF-α) and RA (DAS28) parameters were obtained at the baseline, one, three, and six months after NSPT. | The DAS28 decreased significantly after NSPT in the RA-PD group. The serum TNF-α of the PD group were significantly higher than those of RA-PD. After NSPT, no changes were noted in the levels of these cytokines. The GCF of the IL-1β levels decreased in both groups after NSPT. At six-months, the GCF of the IL-1β levels were significantly lower than the baseline. | NSPT might be beneficial in decreasing local inflammatory markers of PD and RA. |
| Okada et al. (2013) [ | Japan | 55 | To evaluate whether NSPT affect the serum antibodies to | Interventional and prospective clinical trial. Periodontal and rheumatologic parameters and serum levels of cytokine and inflammatory markers citrulline and IgG to | The NSPT group exhibited a significantly greater decrease in DAS28-CRP, the serum levels of IgG to | The findings suggest that NSPT decreases DAS28-CRP and the serum levels of IgG to |
| Erciyas et al. (2013) [ | Turkey | 60 | Aiming at evaluating the effects of NSPT on clinical periodontal measurements and systemic inflammatory mediator levels in RA-PD patients. | Observational prospective cohort study. Thirty patients were RA-PD with a moderate to high DAS28 score and the others were RA-PD with a low DAS28 score. The ESR, CRP, TNF-α levels in serum, DAS28 and periodontal parameters were evaluated at the baseline and after three months of NSPT. | The ESR, CRP, TNF-α levels in serum, DAS28 and periodontal parameters exhibited similar and significant reduction three months after the NSPT. | These findings might indicate beneficial effects of NSPT in reducing RA severity as measured by a significant decrease in inflammatory markers in the serum and DAS28 score in low or moderate to highly active RA patients with PD. |
| Pinho et al. (2009) [ | Brazil | 75 | To evaluate the effects of NSPT on clinical and laboratory parameters in patients with RA and PD. | Clinical and interventional trial. Patients were assigned to five groups according to the presence or absence of RA and PD and with or without NSPT. Clinical periodontal indices, DAS28, CRP, ESR and alpha-1 acid glycoprotein (AAG) were measured at the baseline, three and six months after NSPT. | Significant reduction of periodontal clinical parameters was observed in three and six months after NSPT. A significant decrease in the DAS28 scores of patients with RA-PD were observed when compared to the RA patients that underwent NSPT at the baseline and after three months, but no differences were found after six months. | NSPT might be considered an adjunctive approach to reduce the levels of DAS28 in the RA patients. No other parameters for RA (CRP, ESR and AAG) were significantly affected by NSPT. |
| Ortiz et al. (2009) [ | USA | 40 | To investigate the effect of NSPT on the signs and symptoms of RA in patients treated with or without anti-TNF-α. | Clinical and interventional trial. RA-PD patients under the RA treatment were enrolled. Half of them received NSPT and the other half did not. Clinical periodontal parameters and RA disease activity levels (DAS28 and ESR) were measured at the baseline and six weeks later. | NSPT lead to a significant decrease in the mean DAS28, ESR, and serum TNF-α levels. No significant decrease in these parameters were observed in the untreated control patients. The anti-TNF-α therapy decreased the clinical signs of periodontitis characterized by a reduction in CAL, BOP, probing depth and GI. | The control of PD and inflammation by means of NSPT might contribute to a reduction in the signs and symptoms of active RA. |
| Al Katma et al. (2007) [ | USA | 29 | To evaluate the impact of NSPT on the activity of RA. | Prospective clinical trial. Seventeen RA-PD patients received NSPT and 12 did not. Patients were under the DMARD medication. RA measurements (DAS28 and ESR) and PD indices (CAL, probing depth, BOP, GI) were measured at the baseline and eight weeks after. | Significant decrease in the DAS28 and ESR levels were observed in patients under the NSPT treatment compared to the untreated control. NSPT led to a significant improvement in all periodontal clinical parameters including PI, GI, BOP, and probing depth. | NSPT might reduce the severity of periodontal patients with active RA. |
Scale and root planning (SRP), Non-Surgical Periodontal Treatment (NSPT), Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA), Periodontal Disease (PD), Clinical Attachment Loss (CAL), Gingival Index (GI), Bleeding on Probing (BOP), Gingival Crevicular Fluid (GCF), Tumor Necrosis Factor (TNF), Anti-citrullinated proteins antibodies (ACPA), Rheumatoid Factor (RF), Disease Activity Score including 28-joint count (DAS28), Erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), C-Reactive Protein (CRP), Interleukin (IL), Metalloproteinase (MMP), Osteoprotegerin (OPG), Receptor Activator of the Factor Nuclear Kappa B Ligand (RANKK-L), alpha-1 acid glycoprotein (AAG), Immunoglobulin G (IgG).