Longitudinal changes in subgingival biofilm composition following periodontal treatment

Author:

Johnston William1,Rosier Bob T.2,Carda‐Diéguez Miguel2,Paterson Michael1,Watson Paddy1,Piela Krystyna13,Goulding Marilyn4,Ramage Gordon1,Baranyia Divyashri5,Chen Tsute6,Al‐Hebshi Nezar N.5,Mira Alex27,Culshaw Shauna18

Affiliation:

1. Oral Sciences, Dental School, College of Medical, Veterinary and Life Sciences University of Glasgow Glasgow UK

2. Department of Genomics and Health The Foundation for the Promotion of Health and Biomedical Research (FISABIO) Valencia Spain

3. Division of Dentistry Medical University of Lodz Lodz Poland

4. Global Clinical Affairs Dentsply Sirona York Pennsylvania USA

5. Department of Oral Health Sciences Temple University Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

6. Department of Microbiology Forsyth Institute Cambridge Massachusetts USA

7. CIBER Center for Epidemiology and Public Health Madrid Spain

8. Department of Periodontology University Center for Dental Medicine University of Basel Basel Switzerland

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundCurrent periodontal treatment involves instrumentation using hand and/or ultrasonic instruments, which are used either alone or in combination based on patient and clinician preference, with comparable clinical outcomes. This study sought to investigate early and later changes in the subgingival biofilm following periodontal treatment, to identify whether these changes were associated with treatment outcomes, and to investigate whether the biofilm responded differently to hand compared with ultrasonic instruments.MethodsThis was a secondary‐outcome analysis of a randomized‐controlled trial. Thirty‐eight periodontitis patients received full‐mouth subgingival instrumentation using hand (n = 20) or ultrasonic instrumentation (n = 18). Subgingival plaque was sampled at baseline and 1, 7, and 90 days following treatment. Bacterial DNA was analyzed using 16S rRNA sequencing. Periodontal clinical parameters were evaluated before and after treatment.ResultsBiofilm composition was comparable in both (hand and ultrasonics) treatment groups at all time points (all genera and species; p[adjusted] > 0.05). Large‐scale changes were observed within groups across time points. At days 1 and 7, taxonomic diversity and dysbiosis were reduced, with an increase in health‐associated genera including Streptococcus and Rothia equating to 30% to 40% of the relative abundance. When reassessed at day 90 a subset of samples reformed a microbiome more comparable with baseline, which was independent of instrumentation choice and residual disease.ConclusionsHand and ultrasonic instruments induced comparable impacts on the subgingival plaque microbiome. There were marked early changes in the subgingival biofilm composition, although there was limited evidence that community shifts associated with treatment outcomes.

Funder

National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research

European Regional Development Fund

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Periodontics,General Medicine

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