STUDY FINDS PERIODONTAL TREATMENT DOES NOT LOWER PRETERM BIRTH RISK

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U.S. Department of Health and Human Services 
NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH 
NIH News 
National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research (NIDCR)
http://www.nidcr.nih.gov/

EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE: Wednesday, November 1, 2006, 5:00 p.m. E.T. 

CONTACT: Bob Kuska, 301-594-7560, <kuskar@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>

STUDY FINDS PERIODONTAL TREATMENT DOES NOT LOWER PRETERM BIRTH RISK

Scientists supported by the National Institute of Dental and
Craniofacial Research, part of the National Institutes of Health, report
in this week's "New England Journal of Medicine" that pregnant women who
received non-surgical treatment for their periodontal, or gum, disease
did not also significantly lower their risk of delivering a premature or
low-birthweight baby.  

These results come from the largest clinical trial to date to evaluate
whether treating periodontal disease during pregnancy reduces a women's
risk of early delivery, an idea that has emerged as a possibility in
recent years.  Non-surgical, or standard, periodontal treatment involves
thoroughly cleaning the teeth above and below the gums, commonly called
scaling and root planing.

The study, called the Obstetrics and Periodontal Therapy Trial (OPT),
also evaluated the safety of general dental care during pregnancy.  It
found that dental treatment through the second trimester -- both general
and periodontal care -- did not increase the number of adverse events
for women during pregnancy.  

Until now, little research had been conducted on the subject, although
dentists generally provide limited dental care to women only during the
second trimester when the fetus has reached a more stable developmental
stage and before treatment becomes too physically cumbersome for the
mother.

"Dental care during pregnancy has long been an issue dominated by
caution more than data," said NIDCR director Dr. Larry Tabak.  "The
finding that periodontal treatment during pregnancy did not increase
adverse events is important news for women, especially for those who
will need to have their periodontal disease treated during pregnancy." 

In the United States, more than one-half million -- or about one in
eight --babies are born prematurely, which is defined as a birth that
occurs before 37 weeks of pregnancy.  Extremely preterm babies can be so
small and underdeveloped that they must remain hospitalized for months,
and, if they survive, spend years battling chronic health problems.  

This has spurred scientists to identify several risk factors associated
with premature births.  These include smoking, low-income status,
hypertension, diabetes, alcohol use, and genitourinary tract infections.


However, the list remains incomplete.  As many as half of all preterm
births occur without any clear explanation, and that has left scientists
searching for additional susceptibility factors to help more mothers and
ultimately reduce the estimated $26.2 billion annual cost to the nation
for preterm births.    

Over the last two decades, scientists have generated data in
observational studies that suggest periodontal disease during pregnancy
might be one of those elusive risk factors.  The theory is based on the
idea that bacteria associated with periodontal disease may spread to the
womb and help to induce preterm births.  Results of a previous
small-scale clinical trial further supported this idea, but what's been
missing are more definitive data from larger, randomized clinical
trials. 

To fill this public-health need, the NIDCR funded two large, randomized
clinical trials.  The first to publish its results is the OPT, which
included four participating centers:  Hennepin County Medical Center in
Minneapolis, University of Kentucky in Lexington, University of
Mississippi/Jackson Medical Mall in Jackson, Miss., and Harlem
Hospital/Columbia University in New York City.

Launched in March 2003, OPT enrolled a total of 823 women with
periodontal disease, all of whom were between 13 and 17 weeks pregnant
upon entry into the study.  Each woman was randomly assigned to receive
either:  (1) scaling and root planing of the teeth prior to the 21st
week of pregnancy, then monthly tooth polishings or (2) scaling and root
planing after delivery, meaning women in this group did not have their
periodontal disease treated during their pregnancies.  All women were 16
years or older to participate, and basic dental care was provided to
everyone in the study.

According to Dr. Bryan Michalowicz, a periodontist at the University of
Minnesota and the lead author of the study, one of the OPT's strengths
is its four regional centers generally provide prenatal care to low
income, underserved women of all races, who are recognized as being at
particularly high risk for early delivery. 

"When trying to define risk factors for preterm birth, it's difficult to
control for characteristics that may differ between full and preterm
mothers, such as socioeconomic status or access to health and dental
care," said Michalowicz.  "By randomly assigning women from the same
high-risk populations to receive treatment either before or after
delivery, we could minimize such differences between groups."  

As reported this week, the OPT data show:

-- BIRTH OUTCOMES:  Forty nine (12.0 percent) women in the treatment
group had pregnancies ending before 37 weeks compared to 52 (12.8
percent) of those in the control, or delayed treatment group.   Nineteen
miscarriages occurred, although the numbers were not indicative of a
statistically significant trend in either group.  These included:  Six
spontaneous abortions (two in the treatment group, four in the control
group) and 13 stillbirths (three in the treatment arm, 10 in the control
group.  A spontaneous abortion was defined as a loss of the baby before
20 weeks, while a stillbirth was considered to occur from 20 weeks to 36
weeks and six days.  The researchers also found no significant
differences among the two groups in the proportion of infants who were
of low birthweight, defined as weighing less than 2500 grams, or about
five and half pounds. 

-- PERIODONTAL DISEASE:  Most women had early to moderate periodontal
disease.  The researchers found that the treatment improved all clinical
measures of periodontal disease.  These included the bleeding of gums
when probed, the probing depth between the tooth and gum, and measuring
tooth attachment.  As additional evidence, the researchers found no
difference in risk for preterm birth when they compared treatment and
control women who had the most extensive bleeding of the gums, a sign of
inflammation, or more advanced periodontal disease at entry.  They also
found no differences when they examined a subset of women in the
treatment group whose periodontal disease had improved the most during
the study. 

-- SAFETY OF PERIODONTAL THERAPY:  Women in both groups had similar
rates of adverse medical events, such as hospitalization of more than 24
hours for labor pains.  This is an indication that periodontal therapy
had no obvious effect on pregnancy.  

"This study highlights the power of merging disciplines, in this case
dentistry and obstetrics, to pursue a public-health question," said Dr.
Virginia Lupo, an author on the study and an obstetrician at the
Hennepin County Medical Center in Minneapolis.  "We literally set up
dental practices within our obstetrics clinics, and that was a very
unique and needed approach."  

Although OPT is now the largest study to publish on the subject, the
NIDCR-supported Maternal Oral Therapy to Reduce Obstetric Risk (MOTOR)
study is ongoing.  "It's just good science to conduct more than one
large clinical trial on any public health question," said Dr. Jane
Atkinson, program director of NIDCR's Clinical Trials Program.  "If
periodontal disease plays any role in preterm birth, we want to cast a
wide enough investigational net to determine which women are at risk."

Atkinson said the 1,800-patient MOTOR study is designed a little
differently than OPT.   It involves a broader socio-economic cross
section of women, provides fewer basic dental services, and includes
women with slightly less severe periodontal disease.  MOTOR will likely
report its results within the next two years.

The article is titled "Treatment of Periodontal Disease and The Risk of
Preterm Birth" and appears in the November 2, 2006 issue of the "New
England Journal of Medicine."   The authors are: Bryan S. Michalowicz,
James S. Hodges, Anthony J. DiAngelis, Virginia R. Lupo, M. John Novak,
James E. Ferguson, William Buchanan, James Bofill, Panos N. Papapanou,
Dennis A. Mitchell, Stephen Matseoane, and Pat A. Tschida.         

The National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research is the
nation's leading funder of research on oral, dental, and craniofacial
health.

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) -- The Nation's Medical Research
Agency -- includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a component of the
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. It is the primary federal
agency for conducting and supporting basic, clinical and translational
medical research, and it investigates the causes, treatments, and cures
for both common and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and
its programs, visit <www.nih.gov>.

###

This NIH News Release is available online at:
http://www.nih.gov/news/pr/nov2006/nidcr-01.htm.

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