| Literature DB >> 33193432 |
Fatima Zamri1, Teun J de Vries1.
Abstract
The inflammatory diseases rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and periodontitis show similarities in misbalances of cytokine levels, such as tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α). RA has been treated for two decades with TNF inhibitors which are effective by blocking TNF's destructive action. Since RA and periodontitis show similarities in high levels of TNF, the periodontal status of RA patients may improve with the use of anti-TNF therapy. To assess this, a systematic review with special emphasis on duration of therapy was performed to evaluate the effect of anti-TNF-α treatment on the periodontal status of RA patients. Overall, studies showed an improvement in periodontal health with anti-TNF therapy. When analyzed over time (6 weeks to 9 months), it became apparent that initial improvements concerned bleeding on probing (BOP) and gingival index (GI) after therapy duration of 6 weeks. Periodontitis parameters that improved after prolonged treatment were: probing pocket depth (PPD) after 3 months and clinical attachment level (CAL) after 6 months. In conclusion, this systematic review reveals that anti-TNF treatment is therefore not only beneficial for rheumatic joints but also for the gums of rheumatoid arthritis patients. We propose that the sequential tissue recovery due to anti-TNF therapy progresses as follows: 1. block of diapedesis by lowering vessel permeability, 2 fewer leukocytes in the inflamed tissue, and 3. reduced proteolytic activity and subsequent repair of collagen fiber functionality and normalization of osteoclast activity. Clinically, this could lead to a decrease in bleeding on probing and ultimately in an improved clinical attachment level.Entities:
Keywords: Osteoclast (OC); Periodontitis; Rheumatoid arthritis; TNF - α; etenarcept; inflixmab
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33193432 PMCID: PMC7646519 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.591365
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Search query TNF-alpha inhibitors.
| Search | Query |
|---|---|
| #1 | Periodontitis OR periodontal diseases OR periodontal |
| #2 | Adalimumab OR etanercept OR infliximab OR certolizumab pegol OR antibodies tumor necrosis factor- alpha OR TNF-alpha inhibitors |
| #3 (#1 AND #2) | (periodontitis OR periodontal diseases OR periodontal) AND (adalimumab OR etanercept OR infliximab OR certolizumab pegol OR antibodies tumor necrosis factor alpha OR TNF-alpha inhibitors) |
Figure 1Literature search, strategy, and results.
Studies assessing the effect of TNF inhibitors on periodontal parameters.
| Authors | TNF inhibitor | Subjects | Assessment | PI | GI | BOP | PPD | CAL |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Mayer et al. ( | IFX | RA+ (n = 10) compared to RA without anti-TNF-α (n = 10) | 1 moment (1 calibrated examiner) | NS p > 0.05 | ↓ (sig.) p = 0.0042 | ↓ (sig.) p = 0.0146 | NS p = 0.0554 | ↓ (sig.) p = 0.0273 |
| RA+ (n = 10) compared to healthy patients (n = 10) | 1 moment(1 calibrated examiner) | NS p > 0.05 | NSp > 0.05 | ↓ (sig.) p = 0.0146 | NS p = 0.0554 | ↓ (sig.) p = 0.0273 | ||
| Mayer et al. ( | IFX | RA+ (n = 12) compared to AI (RA, PA and SSc) (n = 36) | 1 moment(2 calibrated examiners) | NS p = 0.0548 | ↓ (sig.) p = 0.0005 | ↓ (sig.) p = 0.0002 | ↓ (sig.) p = 0.0001 | – |
| RA+ (n = 12) compared to healthy patients (with PD, no AI’s or anti-TNF-α) (n = 12) | 1 moment(2 calibrated examiners) | NS p > 0.05 | NSp > 0.05 | NSp > 0.05 | NS p > 0.05 | – | ||
| Schiefelbein et al. ( | ETN (n = 2)ADA (n = 5)Golimumab (n = 6) | RA with PD on anti-TNF-α for >12 months (n = 13) versus non RA with PD (n = 13) | 1 moment(1 calibrated examiner) | NSp = 0.182 | – | ↓ (sig.)p = 0.045 | ↓ (NS)p = 0.068 | NSp = 0.134 |
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| Üstün et al. ( | IFX (n = 9)ADA (n = 7) | RA patients with PD (n = 10) | BL + after 30 days(1 examiner) | NS p = 0.779 | ↑(sig.) p = 0.016 | NS p = 0.067 | NS p = 0.413 | NSp = 0.326 |
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| Ortiz et al. ( | IFXETNADA | RA patients on PDT and anti-TNF-α (n = 10) | BL + after 6 weeks(1 calibrated examiner) | ↓ (sig.)p < 0.01 | ↓ (sig.)p < 0.01 | ↓ (sig.)p < 0.01 | ↓ (sig.)p < 0.01 | ↓ (sig.)p < 0.05 |
| RA patients on anti-TNF-α (n = 10) | BL + after 6 weeks(1 calibrated examiner) | NSp > 0.05 | NSp > 0.05 | NSp > 0.05 | NSp > 0.05 | NSp > 0.05 | ||
| Anti TNF (n = 10) versus no anti-TNF-α (n = 10) | BL + after 6 weeks(1 calibrated examiner) | NS p = 0.37 | ↓ (sig.) p < 0.001 | ↓ (sig.) p < 0.001 | NS p = 0.107 | ↓ (sig.) p < 0.001 | ||
| Kadkhoda et al. ( | ETN (n = 36) | RA patients (n = 36) | BL + after 6 weeks | NS *p = 0.860 | ↓(sig.)p = 0.036 | ↓(sig.) p = 0.049 | NS p = 0.126 | – |
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| Kobayashi et al. ( | ADA (n = 20) | Patients with RA (n = 20) | BL + after 3 months(2 calibrated examiners) | NS p = 0.12 | ↓(sig.) p = 0.002 | ↓(sig.) p = 0.003 | ↓(sig.) p = 0.002 | NSp = 0.42 |
| Kobayashi et al. ( | IFX (n = 6)ETN (n = 9)ADA(n = 19)Golimumab (n = 6) | RA patients treatment with anti-TNF-α (n = 40) | BL + after 3 months(1 examiner calibrated + masked) | NS | ↓(sig.) p < 0.017 | ↓(sig.) p < 0.017 | ↓(sig.) p < 0.017 | NS |
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| Kobayashi et al. ( | IFX (n = 6)ETN (n = 9)ADA(n = 19)Golimumab(n = 6) | RA patients treatment with anti-TNF-α (n = 40) | BL + after 6 months(1 examiner calibrated + blinded) | NS | ↓(sig.) p < 0.017 | ↓(sig.) p < 0.017 | ↓(sig.) p < 0.017 | NS |
| Savioli et al. ( | IFX (n = 15)ETN (n = 2)ADA (n = 1) | RA patients with PD (n = 8) | BL + after 6 months(1 blinded examiner) | ↓(sig.) p = 0.03 | – | NS p = 0.50 | NS p = 0.25 | NSp = 0.84 |
| RA patients without PD (n = 10) | BL + after 6 months(1 blinded examiner) | NSp = 0.27 | – | NSp = 0.95 | NS p = 0.36 | NSp = 0.91 | ||
| Fabri et al. ( | IFXETNADA | AS patients and PD (n = 7) | BL + after 6 months(1 blinded examiner) | NS p = 0.21 | – | NS §p = 0.25 | ↓(sig.) p = 0.01 | ↓(sig.) p = 0.04 |
| Patients with RA and PD (n = 7) | BL and + 6 months(1 blinded examiner) | NS p = 0.076 | – | NS §p = 0.118 | NS p = 0.381 | NSp = 0.36 | ||
| Ancuta et al. ( | IFX, ETN and ADA | RA patients (n = 96) | BL and after 6 months | NS p > 0.05 | NSp > 0.05 | ↓(sig.) p < 0.05 | ↓(sig.) p < 0.05 | ↓(sig.) p < 0.05 |
| Iordache et al. ( | IFX, ETN, ADA andGolimumab | AS patients (n = 86) | BL and after 6 months | NS p > 0.05 | NSp > 0.05 | ↓(sig.) p < 0.05 | ↓(sig.) p < 0.05 | ↓(sig.) p < 0.05 |
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| Pers et al. ( | IFX (n = 20) | RA patients with PD (n = 9) | BL + after 9 months(1 blinded examiner) | NS p > 0.05 | ↑(sig.) † p < 0.05 | ↑(sig.) ‡p < 0.05 | NS p > 0.05 | ↓(sig.)p < 0.05 |
RA, rheumatoid arthritis patients; RA+, rheumatoid arthritis with anti-TNF-α therapy; AI, Autoimmune disease; PA, psoriatic arthritis; SSc, systemic sclerosis; AS, ankylosing spondylitis; PD, periodontitis; PDT, periodontal treatment; GI, gingival index; PI, plaque index; BOP, bleeding on probing; PPD, probing pocket depth; CAL, clinical attachment level; IFX, infliximab, ETN, etanercept; ADA, adalimumab; BL, baseline, n, number; sig., statistically significant; NS, not statistically significant, *Oral hygiene index (OHI), §Gingival bleeding index (GBI), †Modified gingival index (MGI), ‡Papillary bleeding index (PBI).
Green: significant improvement, Red: significant worsening.
Figure 2Periodontal parameters at baseline and at 6 months of anti-TNF-α treatment. PI, plaque index; GI, gingival index; BOP, bleeding on probing; PPD, probing pocket depth; CAL, clinical attachment level.
Studies assessing the effect of TNF inhibitors on rheumatologic parameters and cytokine levels.
| Authors | Subjects | Assesment | DAS28 | Serum CRP levels | Serum TNF-α levels | GCF TNF-α levels |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mayer et al. ( | RA+ (n = 10) compared to RA without anti-TNF-α (n = 10) | 1 moment(1 calibrated examiner) | NS | – | – | ↓(sig.) |
| Mayer et al. ( | RA+ compared to AI (RA, PA and SSc) | 1 moment(2 calibrated examiners) | – | – | – | ↓(sig.) p = 0.002 |
| Schiefelbein et al. ( | RA with PD on anti-TNF-α for >12 months (n = 13) versus non RA with PD (n = 13) | 1 moment(1 calibrated examiner) | – | NS | – | – |
| Üstün et al. ( | RA patients with PD (n = 10) | BL + after 30 days(1 examiner) | ↓(sig.) p = 0.001 | ↓(sig.) p = 0.02 | – | – |
| Ortiz et al. ( | RA patients on PDT and anti-TNF-α (n = 10) | BL + after 6 weeks(1 calibrated examiner) | ↓(sig.) p < 0.005 | – | ↓(sig.) p < 0.001 | – |
| RA patients on anti-TNF-α (n = 10) | BL + after 6 weeks(1 calibrated examiner) | NS | – | NS | – | |
| Kadkhoda et al. ( | RA patients (n = 36) | BL + after 6 weeks | – | – | – | ↓(sig.) |
| Kobayashi et al. ( | Patients with RA (n = 20) | BL + after 3 months(2 calibrated examiners) | ↓(sig.) p < 0.001 | ↓(sig.) p < 0.001 | ↓(sig.) p < 0.001 | – |
| Kobayashi et al. ( | RA patients treatment with anti-TNF-α (n = 40) | BL + after 3 and 6 months(1 examiner calibrated + masked) | ↓(sig.) p < 0.017 | ↓(sig.) p < 0.017 | ↓(sig.) p < 0.017 | – |
| Savioli et al. ( | RA patients with PD (n = 8) | BL + after 6 months(1 blinded examiner) | NS | NS | – | – |
| RA patients without PD (n = 10) | BL + after 6 months(1 blinded examiner) | ↓(sig.) p = 0.04 | ↓(sig.) p = 0.01 | – | – | |
| Fabri et al. ( | AS patients and PD (n = 7) | BL and + 6 months(1 blinded examiner) | – | ↓(sig.) p = 0.03 | – | – |
| Patients with RA and PD (n = 7) | BL and + 6 months(1 blinded examiner) | ↓(sig.) p = 0.01 | ↓(sig.) p = 0.008 | – | – | |
| Ancuta et al. ( | RA patients (n = 96) RA patients (n = 96) | BL and after 6 months | ↓(sig.) | ↓(sig.) p < 0.05 | ↓(sig.) p < 0.05 | – |
| Iordache et al. ( | AS patients (n = 86) | BL and after 6 months | ↓(sig.) *p < 0.05 | ↓(sig.) p < 0.05 | – | – |
| Pers et al. ( | RA patients with PD (n = 9) | BL + after 9 months(1 blinded examiner) | – | – | – | – |
RA, rheumatoid arthritis patients; RA+, rheumatoid arthritis with anti-TNF-α therapy; AS, ankylosing spondylitis; AI, Autoimmune disease; PA, psoriatic arthritis, SSc, systemic sclerosis; PDT, periodontal treatment; PD, periodontitis; DAS28, disease activity score; CRP, C-creative protein; sig., statistically significant; NS, not statistically significant *ASDAS28 ankylosing spondylitis disease activity score.
Green: significant improvement, Red: significant worsening.
Figure 3Hypothetical changes of the periodontium following anti-TNF treatment. Treatment with anti-TNF-α leads to overcoming the TNF-α associated cellular processes such as vasodilatation and permeability for leukocytes (1), proteolysis by this excess of leukocytes of extracellular matrix components, depicted as dotted lines (2) and activation of osteoclasts (3). Anti-TNF-α treatment may lead to less dilated and less permeable blood vessels (4), less proteolytic activity, restoring the extracellular matrix production (5) and tempering osteoclast formation and activity. Clinically, this all leads to less bleeding on probing, and an improvement in attachment which is observed by a decreased PPD and CAL. E, Enamel; CEJ, cemento-enamel-junction; C, cementum; D, dentin; Ep, epithelium; Gin, Gingiva; Oc, osteoclast; AB, alveolar bone.