Implication of dental insurance status on patterns of pre-radiation dental extraction and risk of osteoradionecrosis of the jaw in head-and-neck cancer patients
•Limited scope of universally funded dental care prior to head and neck radiation.•Most pre-radiation dental care self-funded, private-insured or government-sponsored.•Osteoradionecrosis and tooth loss correlates significantly with dental insurance.•Self-pay and public-insurance cohorts more likely...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Oral oncology 2023-10, Vol.145, p.106527-106527, Article 106527 |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Limited scope of universally funded dental care prior to head and neck radiation.•Most pre-radiation dental care self-funded, private-insured or government-sponsored.•Osteoradionecrosis and tooth loss correlates significantly with dental insurance.•Self-pay and public-insurance cohorts more likely to undergo pre-RT extractions.•Public-Insurance patients had a two-fold higher likelihood of developing ORN.
Oral toxicities such as osteoradionecrosis can be minimized by dental screening and prophylactic dental care prior to head and neck (HN) radiation therapy (RT). However, limited information is available about how dental insurance interacts with prophylactic dental care and osteoradionecrosis. To address this gap in knowledge, we conducted a cohort study of 2743 consecutive adult patients treated with curative radiation for HN malignancy who underwent pre-radiation dental assessment and where required, prophylactic dental treatment. Charts were reviewed to determine patient demographics, dental findings, dental treatment and development of osteoradionecrosis following radiation. Three insurance cohorts were identified: private-insured (50.4 %), public-insured (7.3 %), being patients with coverage through government-funded disability and welfare programs, and self-pay (42.4 %).
More than half the public-insured patients underwent prophylactic pre-radiation dental extractions, followed by self-pay patients (44 %) and private-insured patients (26.6 %). After a median follow-up time of 4.23 years, 6.5 % of patients developed osteoradionecrosis. The actuarial rate of osteoradionecrosis in the public-insured patients was 14.7 % at 5-years post-RT, compared to 7.5 % in private-insured patients and 6.7 % in self-pay patients. On multivariable analysis, dental insurance status, DMFS160, age at diagnosis, sex, tumor site, nodal involvement, years smoked and gross income were all significant risk factors for tooth removal prior to HN radiation. However, only public-insured status, tumor site and years smoked were significant risk factors for development of osteoradionecrosis. Our findings demonstrate that lack of comprehensive dental coverage (patients who self-pay or who have limited coverage under public-insured programs) associates strongly with having teeth removed prior to HN RT. Nearly 1 in 6 patients covered under public-insurance developed osteoradionecrosis within 5 years of completing their treatment. Well-funded dental insurance programs for HN cancer pati |
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ISSN: | 1368-8375 1879-0593 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.oraloncology.2023.106527 |