| Literature DB >> 35266059 |
Gianluca Conte1,2, Sebastiano Antonio Pacino2,3, Salvatore Urso3, Rosalia Emma4, Eugenio Pedullà1,5, Fabio Cibella6, Martina Stefanini7, Giovanni Zucchelli7, Riccardo Polosa8,9,10.
Abstract
Cigarette smoking contributes to poor oral health and dental discoloration. Therefore, stopping smoking may translate into measurable amelioration of dental shade indices. We compared dental shade parameters by digital spectrophotometry among current, former, and never smokers and verified their repeatability at 7 and 30 days. Dental shade parameters (CIE L*a*b* and corresponding whiteness index for dentistry-WID) were measured in current, former, and never smokers with a digital spectrophotometer (Vita Easyshade V) on three separate study visits: at baseline (day 0), at day 7, and day 30. Dental shade parameters were analyzed in 18 current, 18 former, and 20 never smokers. The repeatability of shade parameters was consistent in current, former, and never smokers. L*, a*, b*, and WID show significant short and long-term repeatability (p < 0.0001, by regression analyses). The mean (± SD) WID score of 13.42 (± 4.9) in current smokers was significantly lower compared to the WID score of 20.38 (± 5.3) in never smokers (p = 0.001). No significant differences were observed between current and former smokers and between former smokers and former smokers. Dental shade measurements by digital spectrophotometry were highly reproducible and showed that teeth whiteness of current smokers is substantially inferior compared to never smokers. Objective discrimination of dental shade can be a valuable regulatory science endpoint for investigating oral hygiene and dental aesthetics of consumer care products, smoking cessation medications, and tar-free tobacco products (e-cigarettes, heated tobacco products, oral nicotine products) for cigarette substitution.Clinical trial registration: the study was not registered in ClinicalTrials.gov considering that it is a pilot study, parts of a larger project with ID: NCT04649645.Entities:
Keywords: CIE L*a*b*; Dental shade; Digital spectrophotometer; Reproducibility; Smoking; Smoking cessation; Whiteness index for dentistry
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35266059 PMCID: PMC8907006 DOI: 10.1007/s10266-022-00692-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Odontology ISSN: 1618-1247 Impact factor: 2.885
Fig. 1Study Design
Clinical characteristic of study groups
| Current smokers | Former smokers | Never smokers | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Subjects n | 18 | 18 | 20 | |
| Age | 31 (26–37) | 32 (25–43) | 34 (29.5–37) | 0.871 |
| Female | 4/17 (23.5%) | 7/17 (41.2%) | 10/19 (52.6%) | 0.202 |
| Exhaled CO | 15 (11–14.9) | 3 (3–4) | 3 (2–4) | < 0.0001 |
| n. Cigarette/day | 15 (10–15) | // | // | NA |
| Pack/years | 9.6 | 4.7 | // | NA |
| Year non-smoking | // | 2 (1.5–9) | // | NA |
| Toothbrushing frequency/daily | 2 (1.5–3) | 2 (2–3) | 2 (2–2.25) | 0.454 |
| Mouth washing frequency/daily | 0 (0–0) | 0 (0–0) | 0 (0–2) | 0.008 |
| Dental flossing frequency/weekly | 0 (0–1.5) | 1 (0–1.5) | 1 (0–1.5) | 0.791 |
Data are presented as median (IQR), n/N (%)
CO carbon monoxide
Dental shade parameters repeatability analysis in Never Smokers
| Parameters | 7 days (short term) repeatability | 30 days (long term) repeatability | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Regression analysis V2-V1 R value ( | Mean of the difference V2-V1 being different from zero? YES/NO ( | Regression analysis V3-V1 R-value ( | Mean of the difference V3-V1 being different from zero? YES/NO ( | |
| L* | 0.9287 ( | NO ( | 0.8673 ( | NO ( |
| a* | 0.9146 ( | NO ( | 0.8644 ( | NO ( |
| b* | 0.8690 ( | NO ( | 0.8633 ( | YES ( |
| WID | 0.9293 ( | NO ( | 0.8672 ( | NO ( |
Fig. 2Short-term repeatability (V2 vs. V1) of WID scores in Never Smokers. A shows the scatter plot of regression analysis between visit 2 (V2) and visit 1 (V1) for WID scores. B shows the difference between the measurements taken at V1 and V2 concerning the mean in each subject in the Bland Altman plot
Fig. 3Long-term repeatability (V3 vs. V1) of WID scores in Never Smokers. A shows the scatter plot of regression analysis between visit 3 (V3) and visit 1 (V1) for WID scores. B shows the difference between the measurements taken at V1 and V3 concerning the mean in each subject in the Bland Altman plot
Dental shade parameters repeatability analysis in Current Smokers
| Parameters | 7 days (short term) repeatability | 30 days (long term) repeatability | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Regression analysis V2-V1 R value ( | Mean of the difference V2-V1 being different from zero? YES/NO ( | Regression analysis V3-V1 R-value ( | Mean of the difference V3-V1 being different from zero? YES/NO ( | |
| L* | 0.9495 ( | NO ( | 0.9038 ( | NO ( |
| a* | 0.9603 ( | NO ( | 0.9455 ( | NO ( |
| b* | 0.8573 ( | NO ( | 0.8033 ( | YES ( |
| WID | 0.9076 ( | NO ( | 0.8292 ( | NO ( |
Fig. 4Short-term repeatability (V2 vs. V1) of WID scores in Current Smokers. A shows the scatter plot of regression analysis between visit 2 (V2) and visit 1 (V1) for WID scores. B shows the difference between the measurements taken at V1 and V2 concerning the mean in each subject in the Bland Altman plot
Fig. 5Long-term repeatability (V3 vs. V1) of WID scores in Current Smokers. A shows the scatter plot of regression analysis between visit 3 (V3) and visit 1 (V1) for WID scores. B shows the difference between the measurements taken at V1 and V3 concerning the mean in each subject in the Bland Altman plot
Dental shade parameters repeatability analysis in Former Smokers
| Parameters | 7 days (short term) repeatability | 30 days (long term) repeatability | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Regression analysis V2-V1 R value ( | Mean of the difference V2-V1 being different from zero? YES/NO ( | Regression analysis V3-V1 R-value ( | Mean of the difference V3-V1 being different from zero? YES/NO ( | |
| L* | 0.9256 ( | NO ( | 0.9215 ( | NO ( |
| a* | 0.9846 ( | NO ( | 0.9692 ( | NO ( |
| b* | 0.9646 ( | YES ( | 0.9103 ( | NO ( |
| WID | 0.9855 ( | YES ( | 0.9492 ( | NO ( |
Fig. 6Short-term repeatability (V2 vs. V1) of WID scores in Former Smokers. A shows the scatter plot of regression analysis between visit 2 (V2) and visit 1 (V1) for WID scores. B shows the difference between the measurements taken at V1 and V2 concerning the mean in each subject in the Bland Altman plot
Fig. 7Long-term repeatability (V3 vs. V1) of WID scores in Former Smokers. A shows the scatter plot of regression analysis between visit 3 (V3) and visit 1 (V1) for WID scores. B shows the difference between the measurements taken at V1 and V3 concerning the mean in each subject in the Bland Altman plot
Comparison of L*, a*, b*, and WID scores among Current, Former, and Never smokers
| L* | a* | b* | WID | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median (IQR) | Mean ± SD | Mean ± SD | Mean ± SD | |
| Current smokers | 79.69 (73.9–81.5) | 0.57 ± 0.8 | 22.71 ± 2.8 | 13.42 ± 4.9 |
| Former smokers | 79.78 (77.9–83.3) | 0.26 ± 0.99 | 20.87 ± 2.9 | 16.99 ± 6.2 |
| Never smokers | 80.15 (77.6–83.1) | − 0.22 ± 0.6 | 18.92 ± 3 | 20.38 ± 5.3 |
| Overall |
Data are presented as median (interquartile range) or mean ± standard deviation (SD). The overall p values were calculated by Kruskal–Wallis Test* or one-way ANOVA§
Fig. 8Individual WID scores among Current, Former, and Never smokers. The diamond points with a black horizontal bar illustrate the means of each study group. High WID values indicate whiter teeth, with low WID values showing discolored or much darker teeth