Is there a difference in the oral health status of healthy patients and those with inherited bleeding disorders? A systematic review and meta-analysis of case-control studies
Mateus de Azevedo Kinalski , Lucas Peixoto de Araujo , Mateus Bertolini Fernandes dos Santos
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Abstract
Objectives
The aim of this systematic review and meta-analysis of case-control studies was to identify the differences in oral health status between inherited bleeding disorders (IBDs) and healthy patients.
Data
Only case-control studies were included in this review. The risk of bias was assessed using the NOS tool. The random-effects meta-analysis was performed for DMFT and Oral Health Index outcomes.
Sources
Online databases were searched to identify studies reporting a comparison between IBDs oral health conditions (DMFT, Oral Health Index) and healthy patients.
Study selection
Eight case-control studies were included. The majority of the included studies presented a high degree of methodological quality, while one presented a high risk of bias. A meta-analysis regarding the mean DMFT between IBDs and healthy patients reported that children and teenagers (p = 0.52; I² = 73%) or adult patients (p = 0.96, I²= 0) did not present statistically significant differences compared to control groups. The overall DMFT mean difference between IBDs and healthy patients was -0.18 (p = 0.64, I²=0).
Conclusions
There are no differences considering the caries experience of inherited bleeding disorders compared to healthy patients.
Clinical significance
The available evidence indicates that patients with inherited bleeding disorders present similar caries experience with healthy subjects.