Evid Based Dent. 2008;9(2):46-7.
Studies suggest an association between maternal periodontal disease
and pre-eclampsia.
Vergnes JN.
Toulouse Dental Hospital, Dental Department of Epidemiology, and
Unit on Perinatal and Women's Health, Institut National de la Santé
et de la Recherche Médicale, U149, Paris, France.
In this systematic review, several types of infections are
identified and investigated: urinary tract infection, periodontal
disease, Chlamydia pneumoniae infection, HIV infection, malaria and
other persistent bacterial and viral infections. Separate analyses
were conducted for each of them. This summary review will only focus
on the link between pre-eclampsia and periodontitis, which was just
a part of the original systematic review.
Data Sources:
MEDLINE,
EMBASE, POPLINE, CINAHL, LILACS (all from inception to June 30,
2007), proceedings of international meetings on pre-eclampsia,
bibliography of the retrieved articles, reviews, chapters in
standard textbooks on hypertension in pregnancy, and contact with
investigators involved in the field were used to identify relevant
studies. No language restrictions were imposed.
Study Selection:
Cohort, case-control or cross-sectional studies with original data
that evaluated the association between maternal periodontal disease
and pre-eclampsia were included. Cases were defined as women
suffering from hypertension plus proteinuria, after 20 weeks'
gestation. DATA EXTRACTION AND SYNTHESIS: Data were extracted from
each study according to design, geographic location, sample size,
gestational age when periodontal disease was diagnosed, definition
and severity of pre-eclampsia, confounding factors controlled for,
temporality of the association, and report of dose-response
gradient. Studies included in the systematic review were also
included in the meta-analysis if they reported Odds Ratio (OR) or
Relative Risk (RR) estimates with their 95% Confidence Intervals (CIs),
or provided the information necessary to calculate them. Results
from different reports were combined to produce a pooled OR
according to the Mantel-Haenszel method, using both fixed- and
random-effects models. Heterogeneity was quantified with I(2)
statistics. Studies were also quality assessed.
Results:
Seven
case-control studies and 2 cohort studies evaluated the association
between periodontal disease and pre-eclampsia. Six studies,
representing a total of 3420 women (493 pre-eclamptic and 2927
non-pre-eclamptic control women) were pooled for meta-analysis.
Women with evidence of periodontal disease during pregnancy had a
1.76 fold higher risk of pre-eclampsia compared with women without
periodontal disease (OR, 1.76, 95% CI: 1.43-2.18).
Conclusions:
Periodontal disease during pregnancy is associated with an increased
risk of pre-eclampsia. More studies are required to verify this as
well as to explore whether or not such relationship is causal and,
if so, the mechanisms involved.