Litcius/Paper detail

The Role of Oral Health in the Acquisition and Severity of SARS-CoV-2: A Retrospective Chart Review

Sunil Wadhwa, Sheilesh Dave, M.L. Daily, Alba Nardone, R. Li, Jessica del Rosario, A. Cantos, Janak N. Shah, Haiying Lu, D.J. McMahon, Michael T. Yin

2022The Saudi Dental Journal10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Objective: entry. However, the role of oral health in the acquisition and severity of COVID-19 is not known. Design: A retrospective analysis was performed using electronic health record data from a large urban academic medical center between 12/1/2019 and 8/24/2020. A total of 387 COVID-19 positive cases were identified and matched 1:1 by age, sex, and race to 387 controls without COVID-19 diagnoses. Demographics, number of missing teeth and alveolar crestal height were determined from radiographs and medical/dental charts. In a subgroup of 107 cases and controls, we also examined the rate of change in alveolar crestal height. A conditional logistic regression model was utilized to assess association between alveolar crestal height and missing teeth with COVID-19 status and with hospitalization status among COVID-19 cases. Results: Increased alveolar bone loss, OR = 4.302 (2.510 - 7.376), fewer missing teeth, OR = 0.897 (0.835-0.965) and lack of smoking history distinguished COVID-19 cases from controls. After adjusting for time between examinations, cases with COVID-19 had greater alveolar bone loss compared to controls (0.641 ± 0.613 mm vs 0.260 ± 0.631 mm, p < 0.01.) Among cases with COVID-19, increased number of missing teeth OR = 2.1871 (1.146- 4.174) was significantly associated with hospitalization. Conclusions: Alveolar bone loss and missing teeth are positively associated with the acquisition and severity of COVID-19 disease, respectively.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)DentistryLogistic regressionRetrospective cohort studyDental alveolusRadiographyMedical recordConditional logistic regressionDiseaseCase-control studyInternal medicineSurgeryInfectious disease (medical specialty)Dental Research and COVID-19Dermatological and COVID-19 studiesCOVID-19 Clinical Research Studies