Longevity of dental restorations in Sjogren's disease patients using electronic dental and health record data

Decreased salivary secretion is not only a risk factor for carious lesions in Sjögren's disease (SD) but also an indicator of deterioration of teeth with every restorative replacement. This study determined the longevity of direct dental restorations placed in patients with SD using matched ele...

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Veröffentlicht in:BMC oral health 2024-02, Vol.24 (1), p.203-203, Article 203
Hauptverfasser: Gomez, Grace Gomez Felix, Wang, Mei, Siddiqui, Zasim A, Gonzalez, Theresa, Capin, Oriana R, Willis, Lisa, Boyd, LaKeisha, Eckert, George J, Zero, Domenick T, Thyvalikakath, Thankam Paul
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Decreased salivary secretion is not only a risk factor for carious lesions in Sjögren's disease (SD) but also an indicator of deterioration of teeth with every restorative replacement. This study determined the longevity of direct dental restorations placed in patients with SD using matched electronic dental record (EDR) and electronic health record (EHR) data. We conducted a retrospective cohort study using EDR and EHR data of Indiana University School of Dentistry patients who have a SD diagnosis in their EHR. Treatment history of patients during 15 years with SD (cases) and their matched controls with at least one direct dental restoration were retrieved from the EDR. Descriptive statistics summarized the study population characteristics. Cox regression models with random effects analyzed differences between cases and controls for time to direct restoration failure. Further the model explored the effect of covariates such as age, sex, race, dental insurance, medical insurance, medical diagnosis, medication use, preventive dental visits per year, and the number of tooth surfaces on time to restoration failure. At least one completed direct restoration was present for 102 cases and 42 controls resulting in a cohort of 144 patients' EDR and EHR data. The cases were distributed as 21 positives, 57 negatives, and 24 uncertain cases based on clinical findings. The average age was 56, about 93% were females, 54% were White, 74% had no dental insurance, 61% had public medical insurance,
ISSN:1472-6831
1472-6831
DOI:10.1186/s12903-024-03957-9