Abstract:
This research aims to provide updated information on caries experience and associated risk factors in children 6-12 years old. A cross-sectional and descriptive study design was carried out with a non-probabilistic, convenient sample of 209 children male and female. Clinical examinations were performed by calibrated dental students following WHO detection criteria. Caries indices dmft and DMFT were calculated. Caries Risk Assessment data was collected using an adapted CAMBRA instrument; following the International Caries Care guidelines. Descriptive statistics were performed to analyze the results and Chi-square test, Contingency Coefficient (C) and Corrected Typified Residues were calculated to determine the association between variables. 58% of the total population had dental caries lesions in its more severe stages (cavitation) and 42% were apparently healthy (AHS) without any cavitated lesions. The mean dmft index was 1.34 ± 1.93, and the mean DMFT index was 0.63 ± 1.22. Lesion severity remained between 1-2 teeth affected on both dentitions. A statistically significant association (p = 0.035) between the health condition and toothbrushing was stablished with a degree of dependence of C = 0.144. A positive standardized residual of 2.1 was evident for schoolchildren that experience caries lesion that never brush their teeth and AHS that brushed their teeth more than once. No association (p = 0.081) was found between health condition and intake of sugary snacks and beverages. A severe dental caries experience with a statistically significant association between the health condition and toothbrushing with fluoridated toothpaste 1450 ppm > 1 a day and a positive correlation in schoolchildren that experience caries lesion that never brush their teeth.
Keywords: Dental Caries; Risk Factors; Tooth, Deciduous; Dentition, Permanent
Introduction
Dental caries affects humans without distinction of gender, age, socioeconomic status, or race, although the individuals most vulnerable to this disease are in the lowest socioeconimic classes.1,2 Dental caries is defined by consensus as a biofilm-mediated, diet modulated, multifactorial, non-communicable, dynamic disease resulting in net mineral loss of dental hard tissues, determined by biological, behavioral, psychosocial, and environmental factors.3 Although the presence of aciduric bacteria in the dental biofilm capable of lowering the pH in conditions of severe dysbiosis is the cornerstone of the disease, the participation of external factors such as high intake of sugar is necessary for the disease to settle and progress. The disease in the absence of treatment progresses until the appearance of a lesion that could be detected in a clinical stage by the localized mineral loss of hard tissues.4
In addition, the dental caries lesion is understood as a dynamic interaction process that occurs between the tooth surface and the dental biofilm, in which there is an imbalance between the net mineral loss and gain; this imbalance at a given moment can favor the demineralization process.4,5 The lesion is considered the late sign of dental caries disease;4 however, its first expression at a subclinical stage can be arrested or remineralized when the balance among the physiological events that occur in the dental biofilm is restored.6
Dental caries is a generalized problem among young children according to the information published by the World Health Organization (WHO), and it is estimated that approximately 60 to 90% of school children have this pathology worldwide.7 Venezuela is not an exception and, despite the few local scientific reports,8–12 it is known that the disease prevalence ranges from 60 to 80%, being school-age children the most affected. Dental caries management is a costly expense for the governments and is beyond the financial capabilities of the majority of low-income countries, especially because the financial resources are strongly limited for public dentistry.13
Caries risk assessment (CRA) is one of the bases in patient-centered caries lesion management. CRA establishes the probability to develop carious lesions over a certain time period or the likelihood that there will be a change in size or activity of lesions already present.14 There is a lot of controversy about which of the multiple factors involved in the disease can really impact its onset and how can they be measured. On the other hand, there is not sufficient designed and validated tools that accurately and reliably evaluate the cause of this complex disease. Some tools rely on reasoning-based manual standardized checklists, such as the American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry's Caries Risk Assessment Form (CRAF)15 and the Caries Management by Risk Assessment (CAMBRA) philosophy.16 Others use algorithms in software programs; as examples there are the Cariogram, a software that calculates the “chance to avoid caries” using 10 caries-related risk factors,17 the National University of Singapore model, which is a statistical model built through epidemiological data collected from preschoolers in Singapore to expresses chance of developing caries as a percentage,18 and the PreViserSM an online tools that based on patient history and clinical data calculates caries risk, in a central software unit.19
Knowledge of the oral health status and dental caries risk assessment in schoolchildren are an essential element for developing, planning, organizing, and controlling dental care programs and practice.20 Limited official information is available addressing the above problems; therefore, the aim of this study focused on providing risk factors associated with dental caries disease in children 6 to 12 years old, and updating the information on caries experience in this age group. The results will be useful to further develop a large-scale project based on intervention strategies and prevention programs that improve the oral health of this vulnerable sector.
Methodology
Design and sample selection
This was a cross-sectional and descriptive design; carried out during the period January-March 2020. The total universe of children registered in elementary schools (1st to 6thgrade) in Chacao Municipality was 9,133 children for the year 2003-2004,21 being the closer statistical data obtained from municipality authorities. The selection of the school was based first and most on being a public school in proximity to the healthcare public service where personal safety for the researchers could be guarantee. Second, the school had a number of students that could provide a representative sample of schoolchildren in that age group. The schoolchildren enrolled in the selected public school, according to Graffar-Mendez Castellano Scale,22 were from a medium-low socioeconomic status. A non-probabilistic, convenient sample of 400 6-12-year-old children was selected for the study. This sample constituted the totality of 1st to 6th grade schoolchildren enrolled in the period 2019-2020 from the selected public school, and represented 4.4% of the total children registered in Chacao Municipality in 2003-2004. Out of the 400 children, 209 (52.3%) boys and girls provided a written consent form signed by a parent or guarding accepting the participation in the study. The study protocol and consent form were reviewed and approved by the Bioethical Committee of the Faculty of Dentistry, Central University of Venezuela (CB-139-2021).
Clinical examination and caries lesion index calculation
The clinical examinations were carried out on children at school premises. A total of 5 dental students participated in data collection and one calibrated dental student (AGQ) performed all the exams based on the criteria reported by the WHO.23 The examiner's reliability was assessed with kappa statistics (Cohen's kappa intra = 0.95).24 The remaining students recorded the data. The visual detection of dental caries lesions was performed under natural light, using a wooden tongue depressor. The exam was done following the biosafety regulations of the Faculty of Dentistry, Central University of Venezuela. To record the data, the evaluation was carried out in sequential order by quadrant, first evaluating primary teeth followed by permanent teeth. From the recorded data, the dmft and DMFT caries indexes were calculated for both primary and permanent dentition.
The WHO criteria comply the following recommendations:23 a) each tooth was visually examined for the presence of cavitated lesions, fillings, and teeth lost due to caries, b) if there was doubt about the patient's response in relation to lost teeth and it was not possible to obtain accurate information, the examiner followed his clinical judgment, and c) each code was clearly dictated to avoid errors in the annotation.
Caries risk factors assessment
The data for Caries Risk Assessment (oral hygiene practices, dietary habits, physiological and structural conditions, among others) was collected using the CAMBRA instrument25 adapted to semantic characteristics by the Pediatric Dentistry Department of the Faculty of Dentistry, Central University of Venezuela. The information recorded in the evaluation instrument was taken by the same group of students that performed the clinical evaluation. CAMBRA tool uses three categories for caries risk, but in practice it is probably quicker, easier, and sufficient to focus on correctly identifying patient at the extremes of the risk spectrum because those at the low and high risk categories have clear management needs. Therefore, the individual risk of each patient in this study was determined according the International Caries Care (ICC)26, classifying the sample as low and high risk.
Statistical analysis
All data were entered and analyzed using Excel Software and the Statistical Package for the Social Sciences version 20 software (SPSS Inc, Chicago, USA). Descriptive statistics (mean, frequencies, percentage, correlations) were performed and used for result interpretation, according to the variables studied. Statistical comparison between groups was done using paired Student's t-test. In order to determine the association among variables, a Pearson's Chi-square non-parametric test was used. Since Chi-square test only determines the existence of association between variables but it does not yield results in the meaning and magnitude of the association, it was decided to measure the degree of association using the Contingency Coefficient (C). Finally, to verify how the variables contribute to the association (correlation), the corrected typified residuals analysis was carried out. Significance was considered with a p < 0.05.
Results
The demographic variables show a fairly equitable distribution of the population in terms of gender and age.
Dental caries experience
The results indicated that 58% of the total population showed dental caries lesions in its more severe stages (cavitation) and 42% were apparently healthy without any cavitated lesions (Table 1). In relation to the primary dentition, 47.4% of schoolchildren presented cavitated lesions, as opposed to the permanent dentition, where only 27.4% presented lesions. The percentages of schoolchildren with affected primary dentition among the age groups 6–7, 8, and 9 years were greater than 50%. On the other hand, the percentage of schoolchildren with affected permanent dentition increased 2.3 times in the age ranges of 6–7 and 8 years and remain unchanged until the age of 12 years (Table 1).
The mean dmft index of the schoolchildren was 1.34 ± 1.93 and the mean DMFT index was 0.63 ± 1.22. By age group, the dmft index ranged from 2.65 to 1.28 for children aged 6–7, 8, and 9 years, and a significant increase was observed when the dmft index was compared between 6–7 and 9 years (p = 0.005). On the contrary, the average DMFT ranged from 0.21 to 1.96 in children from 6 to 12 years old. A significant 3.4-fold increase was observed between DMFT in 6-7 and 8 years old (p = 0.05), as well as the DMFT in 6–7 and 11–12 years (p = 0.008). A 3-fold increase was noted between the DMFT in 10 and 11–12 years, however the difference was not significant. No significant variation (p > 0.05) was observed between the males and females regarding the dmft; however, the girls had a slightly higher DMFT index (Table 2).
When analyzing the indices according to severity (Table 3), it was observed that, among the sample that had cavitated lesions, children with 1–2 teeth affected in the primary dentition represented 49.6%, with 3–4 teeth affected were 14.9%, and with more than 5 teeth with cavitation, 16.5%. In the permanent dentition a different pattern was observed: 27.3% of the children showed 1 to 2 cavitated teeth, and 19.8% had a lesion in 3 to 4 teeth.
Determination of dental caries risk factors
Eighty-nine percent of the schoolchildren were identified as high risk for dental caries disease development or caries lesion progression; however, 11% of the total population was classified as low risk (Figure).
Dental caries experience and associated risk factors: oral hygiene practices and dietary habits
Out of the total number of patients evaluated (209), 121 (57.9%) were affected by the disease in a cavitated state, and of these, 16 (13.2%) never brushed their teeth and 105 (86.8%) brushed more than once a day. The remaining 88 patients (42.1%) were apparently healthy and out of these total, 4 (4.5%) never brushed and 84 (95.5%) brushed more than once a day (Table 4).
In relation to dietary habits, more than half of the total children (63.6%) had a high intake of sugary snacks and beverages. Out of the 121 kids recorded as schoolchildren that experience caries lesion, 83 (68.6%) consumed sugary snacks and beverages 3 times a day and 31.4% had a low frequency intake. On the other hand, for the apparently healthy group, 56.8% consumed sweet snacks 3 times a day or more, and 43.2% had a low consumption (Table 4).
The results of the Chi-square independent test showed a statistically significant association between the health condition and toothbrushing (p = 0.035). In contrast, no association (p = 0.081) was found between health condition and intake of sugary snacks and beverages (Table 5). The degree of dependence between the variables health condition and toothbrushing according to the contingency correlation coefficient (C) was C = 0.144, with a p = 0.035 (Table 6).
To verify the variables that contributed to the association between the health condition and toothbrushing, the corrected typified residuals analysis was used. The difference between the observed and expected counts show a positive standardized residual of 2.1 for schoolchildren with caries lesions that never brushed their teeth and apparently healthy schoolchildren that brushed their teeth more than once. On the contrary, a negative standardized residual of −2.1 was observed for schoolchildren with caries lesions that brushed their teeth more than once and apparently healthy schoolchildren that never brushed their teeth (Table 7).
Discussion
The results of the present study are limited to a cross-sectional evaluation due to the nature of the data. A sample size of 209 schoolchildren was well thought out and in agreement among the researchers as enough to analyze this study's main objective of “provide an association between risk factors in children 6 to 12 years old and dental caries disease”. Additionally, possible biases associated with the detection criteria could have impacted the results, which must be considered when interpreting the results. The detection criteria used was selected after a consensus of the participant researchers since it was the only method that allowed comparisons with other local or national studies carried out in the country regarding caries experience.
This study showed a severe state of dental caries disease expressed as cavitated lesions and the association with risk factors in a group of Venezuelan schoolchildren. The results discussed exclude caries lesions in less severe stages or non-cavitated, because the detection method used considers as a dental caries only cavitated lesions. Therefore, the observed results do not reflect the real situation of the disease. For these reasons and analysis purposes the population without cavities was called “Apparently Healthy Schoolchildren” (AHS).
Caries prevalence indicated that 58% of the schoolchildren between 6 and 12 years had at least one cavitated caries lesion in either primary or permanent dentitions. When contrasting these results with those of Morón and Cordova12 in a national study who report a prevalence of 55% for the same age group, we observed that the prevalence showed only slight changes after 12 years. Three questions can be drawn from these results: a) Has there really been a change in the prevalence of cavitated lesions in this age group nationwide, or the difference is just a simple coincidence due to the sample used?; b) Does a well selected population within a few municipalities or states could be considered to evaluate the national status of the disease and allow the design of less costly investigations with accurate criteria?; and finally, (c) Are there any factors that might be controlling the lesion development and progression in this population?
It was unexpected that the caries prevalence did not increase, despite the fact that in the last 12 years a deep deterioration in social determinants had been occurring in Venezuela. In particular, affected conditions such as quality of life, inadequate eating patterns, limited access to health services, poor water sanitizing measures, low wages, and impoverished education could influence the individual susceptibility to develop dental caries with consequent lesion progression. However, the aforesaid seems to be not very influential in the studied population. This behavior in the prevalence pattern suggests that there might be other factors to consider that could be overcoming the effect that the deterioration in social conditions is capable of producing. Such factors include: tooth brushing with fluoridated toothpastes4,5,27 that are widely used in the country, the quality of saliva, and the dietary components available (fiber, proteins, fats, and prebiotics). Nonetheless, as we comment above, it is important that this assumption be verified with well-designed and low-cost clinical trials.
From the results regarding disease severity, it is impressive that 73.5% of schoolchildren between 6 and 7 years old and more than half of the children aged 8 and 9 already had the disease in its most severe stage, expressed as cavitation, in their primary dentition; although lesion severity remained between 1 and 2 cavitated teeth. This indicates that the disease was established early in life, and due to the lack of treatment and control it progressed affecting the hard tissue (enamel) with the consequent lesion development (non-cavitated) that advanced to cavitation. This could be associated with the inadequate early introduction of dietary components (> 5–10% of sugar intake) before 2 years of age,28 which could favor a shift in the commensal dental biofilm microbiota and lead to the establishment of a modified bacterial ecosystem (dysbiosis) that will be the driving force behind negative health outcomes.4
Permanent dentition was also addressed on the same schoolchildren, thus sharing the same dysbiotic conditions in their dental biofilm. The results of this study showed that the proportion of children 6–7 years with cavitated lesions in their primary dentition is 6.2 times greater than the proportion of those same children who had permanent teeth affected with caries lesion. Even though it has been reported in the literature that the presence of dental caries lesions in the primary dentition is a predictor of future lesions in the young permanent dentition,29 the results seem to indicate that both the disease severity and its presence (dmft/DMFT 1-2 cavities) are similar in permanent and primary dentitions, but the proportion of schoolchildren with caries in their permanent dentition is significantly lower (p < 0.005).
In order to analyze this situation even further, the total number of schoolchildren with first permanent molars erupted was calculated. It was noted that out of 33 schoolchildren with permanent dentition, 17 (52%) had the first permanent molars erupted and only 4 (23%) of them had cavitated lesions. Possible explanations could be suggested for this opposing results. First, dental caries disease in primary dentition often affects the cervical area of the buccal surface of the upper incisors and second and first molars.30 In contrast, in the permanent dentition, the upper incisors are generally not affected and the lesion primarily appears in the occlusal surface of molars.31 In particular, lower incisors are located in proximity to the excretory duct of the submandibular and sublingual salivary glands, therefore constantly exposed to a saliva flow that would favor the spontaneous remineralization of any possible caries lesions that develop, thus reducing the progression to cavitation. Second, in children with severe disease, the lesion progresses more rapidly in primary dentition compared to permanent dentition due to the enamel structure, morphology, and composition.30,32 Also, as supported by our results, the primary teeth are exposed early to severe disease conditions (dysbiosis in the dental biofilm) for a longer period of time. In addition, it is important to consider the effect of sample size on the results.
The mean dmft and DMFT indexes support what was previously discussed and were in agreement with national and local studies by Morón et al.12 and Montero et al.33 The increment of 3.4-fold observed between children 6–7 and 8 years old, as well as of 3.0-fold increase between those 10 and 12 years old corresponds to the ages of first and second permanent molar eruptions, with the consequent exposure of more surfaces at risk to dysbiotic oral environment conditions without any treatment.
Dental caries experience is evidently seen in the studied sample where the disease was in a severe stage and slowly progressed into cavitated lesions. Moreover, when analyzing the risk level and how the disease expresses, a striking result appeared. Results demonstrated that 58% were affected by dental caries, using cavity as indicator of the disease. However it was established by risk determination that 89% of the population was identify as high risk, either with non-cavitated, cavitated, clinically non-detected lesion, or just the disease presence, and only 11% of the children could be assumed as healthy. These results clearly indicate that the prevalence only reflects the disease in its more severe state when the cavitated lesion is already present, and that only taking this parameter as an indicator to assess the disease is not enough because it produces a major underreport. Therefore, it was important to analyze the factors that might have determined the lesion expression and progression in this population. The association between oral hygiene practices (toothbrushing with fluoridated toothpaste) and dietary habits (intake of sugary snacks and beverages) with the population's health and disease condition (dental caries experience) were evaluated.
For this sample, it was found that toothbrushing with fluoridated toothpastes once or more a day had a significant association (p = 0.035) and positive correlation with the AHS. This result is similar to that of the study of Llena et al.34 where it was found that toothbrushing with fluoridated toothpastes at least twice a day was associated with significantly lower values of DMFT. On the one hand, toothbrushing by itself is not as effective to control lesion progression35, nonetheless it is important to consider its effect on the disorganization and removal of the dental biofilm, which allows salivary clearance of accumulated harmful compounds (acids) and reduction of bacterial mass density. On the other hand, the use of fluoridated toothpastes creates a rich fluoride environment that will encourage remineralization by acceleration and enhancement of lost mineral depositions on demineralized enamel.36 Both mechanical biofilm removal and the use of fluoride are important strategies to protect the dental structure and, by some means, control lesion progression. However, it is essential to asses dental caries disease in order to successfully shift dysbiotic conditions to a healthy state, as it is known that the dental caries lesion is the clinical expression of a complex process likely to occur when there is a drift of pH in the biofilm, as a consequence of increased carbohydrate availability or reduced salivary clearance.4
Diet, specifically fermentable carbohydrates, have been considered as main factors that modulate the shift from symbiosis to dysbiosis of microbial interactions, metabolisms, and microbiome conditions within the dental biofilm, consequently favoring the onset of dental caries disease..6 In this study, a high frequency and daily intake of sugary snacks and beverages was found among the schoolchildren, maybe due to the families’ socioeconomic reality where carbohydrate-based foods are more accessible and to the fact that schoolchildren have multiple snacks during school hours, where they spend most of the day. However, a clear significant evidence linking their dietary habits to their caries experience could not be stablished. Similar results were found by Salgo37 in a population of preschool children residing in Sucre Municipality, Caracas Venezuela, where no association was observed between the carbohydrates total daily intake (starches, sugars, and combined) and the presence of the disease (non-cavitated and cavitated lesions). Both this study's and Salgo's results in Venezuelan populations support what has been previously reported.38
The impact of other factors might have overwhelmed the effect of sugary snacks. It has been shown in various studies39,40 that the presence of fluoride when evaluating the association between dental caries and diet could mask the effect of sugars, thus weakening the possible association between these variables. As previously discussed, a significant positive correlation was found between toothbrushing with fluoridated toothpastes and a healthy condition, possibly explaining why a significant correlation was not found between the intake of sugary snacks and beverages and dental caries experience (p = 0.081). Moreover, the fluoride presence might have reduced the progression of lesions to a lesser degree of severity, not allowing cavitation and consequently blinding the association. Since this phenomenon is a reflection of a masking done by the effect of fluoride, it does not imply that a high consumption of carbohydrates, in its different forms, is not an important risk factor for the onset of dental caries disease and lesion.
Finally, and also important to consider, is the general approach towards how the dietary habit was assessed, which lacked the inclusion of detailed specifications such as type of food, quantities and portions, and nutrient availability different from sugars (proteins, lipids, and other carbohydrates). As previously mention, diet is considered to modulate dental caries and as so it must be further studied using well designed and validated diet questionnaires that could accurately supplement the CRA.
Based upon the results found in this study, and from the point of view of the clinical and dental public health application, implementing oral health education programs targeting dental caries disease and lesion as well as associated risk factors seems necessary. Additionally, it is also considered necessary to carry out research with the most modern detection criteria to give results consistent with the situation of the disease in our schoolchildren. The results of this study will pave the way for conducting a large-scale research in the country with a larger sample size that involves more specific detection techniques and detailed risk factors assessment, required to give a representative image of the national caries experience scenario and associated factors. Ultimately, it is necessary that public policies and preventive programs that have community-based participation and alignment with local cultures are developed and implemented in schools where oral health primary and secondary prevention methods may be employed to manage dental caries disease in vulnerable communities.
Conclusion
These results suggest a severe dental caries experience with a statistically significant association between the health condition and toothbrushing with fluoridated toothpaste (1450 ppm) more than once a day and a positive standardized residual of 2.1 in schoolchildren that experience caries lesion that never brushed their teeth.
Acknowledgements
The authors want to express their most sincere thanks to: Gabriela Labastidas; Edwin Jardim; Johanaise Parra; Sharay Pacheco, Noribel Deyan (Internship Students at Salud Chacao), Dra Corina Aristimuño (Academic Coordinator of the Internship Program at Central University of Venezuela), Dr. Osman Mota (General Coordinator of the Dentistry Department at Salud Chacao and Field Coordinator of the Internship Program) “Sagrado Corazon de Jesus” School at Chacao Municipality, their Principal and teachers, Jose Torres (Statistics Consultant).
References
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Publication Dates
-
Publication in this collection
09 Feb 2022 -
Date of issue
2022
History
-
Received
16 Feb 2020 -
Reviewed
11 Nov 2021 -
Accepted
14 July 2021