Salivary and serum inflammatory biomarkers during periodontitis progression and after treatment

Author:

Teles Flavia R. F.12ORCID,Chandrasekaran Ganesh3,Martin Lynn1,Patel Michele4,Kallan Michael J.5,Furquim Camila16ORCID,Hamza Tahir7,Cucchiara Andrew J.5,Kantarci Alpdogan48ORCID,Urquhart Olivia910ORCID,Sugai James811,Giannobile William V.8ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Basic and Translational Sciences School of Dental Medicine, University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

2. Center for Innovation and Precision Dentistry (CiPD), University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

3. Department of Biostatistics, Epidemiology, and Informatics Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

4. Multiplex Core, The Forsyth Institute Cambridge Massachusetts USA

5. Center for Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics (CCEB), Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

6. Department of Periodontology and Oral Implantology, Dental Research Division University of Guarulhos Guarulhos São Paulo Brazil

7. Department of Periodontics School of Dental Medicine, University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

8. Department of Oral Medicine, Infection and Immunity Harvard School of Dental Medicine Boston Massachusetts USA

9. Department of Preventive and Restorative Sciences School of Dental Medicine, University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

10. Center for Integrative Global Oral Health School of Dental Medicine, University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

11. Department of Periodontics and Oral Medicine School of Dentistry, University of Michigan Ann Arbor Michigan USA

Abstract

AbstractAimTo identify serum‐ and salivary‐derived inflammatory biomarkers of periodontitis progression and determine their response to non‐surgical treatment.Materials and MethodsPeriodontally healthy (H; n = 113) and periodontitis patients (P; n = 302) were monitored bi‐monthly for 1 year without therapy. Periodontitis patients were re‐examined 6 months after non‐surgical periodontal therapy (NSPT). Participants were classified according to disease progression: P0 (no sites progressed; P1: 1–2 sites progressed; P2: 3 or more sites progressed). Ten salivary and five serum biomarkers were measured using Luminex. Log‐transformed levels were compared over time according to baseline diagnosis, progression trajectory and after NSPT. Significant differences were sought using linear mixed models.ResultsP2 presented higher levels (p < .05) of salivary IFNγ, IL‐6, VEGF, IL‐1β, MMP‐8, IL‐10 and OPG over time. Serum analytes were not associated with progression. NSPT led to clinical improvement and significant reduction of IFNγ, IL‐6, IL‐8, IL‐1β, MMP‐8, IL‐10, OPG and MMP‐9 in saliva and of CRP, MMP‐8, MMP‐9 and MPO in serum.ConclusionsPeriodontitis progression results from a sustained pro‐inflammatory milieu that is reflected in salivary biomarkers, but less so in serum, likely because of the limited amount of progression per patient. NSPT can significantly decrease the levels of several salivary analytes.

Funder

National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

Publisher

Wiley

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