BMJ: Severe gum disease, known as periodontitis, may be an early sign of
type 2 diabetes, reveals research published in the online journal BMJ Open Diabetes Research & Care. Screening patients visiting their dentist for the treatment of severe
gum disease, to try and stave off the complications associated with
longstanding diabetes, would be feasible and worthwhile, suggest the
researchers. They base their findings on 313 predominantly middle-aged people
attending a university dental clinic: 109 had no gum disease; 126 had
mild to moderate gum disease; and in 78 it was severe, affecting the
supporting structures of the teeth.
Weight was significantly higher in those with severe gum disease:
they had an average BMI of 27 or higher. But other risk factors for
diabetes, including high blood pressure, and high cholesterol levels,
were similar among all three groups.
And people with mild to moderate gum disease also had more relatives with diabetes than those with no or severe gum disease.
Just under 3% of those with no gum disease had already been diagnosed
with type 2 diabetes; this was also the case for 4% of those with mild
to moderate gum disease, and for nearly 8% of those with the severe
form.
HbA1C values, which measure the average level of blood sugar in the
body over the past 2-3 months, were obtained by analysing dried blood
spots, which had been sampled from each of the study participants, using
a finger pin-prick test.
An HbA1C value of 39-47 mmol/l is considered to indicate ‘pre-diabetes,’ while values above that indicate diabetes.
The analysis of the dried blood spots showed that HbA1C values were highest in those with the most severe form of gum disease.
Their average HbA1C value was 45 mmol/l (6.3%), compared with 43
mmol/l (6.1%) in those with mild to moderate gum disease and 39 mmol/l
(5.7%) in those with no gum disease.
People with suspected diabetes (23% and 14%, respectively) and
pre-diabetes (47% and 46%, respectively) were significantly over
represented among those with severe and mild to moderate gum disease.
Among those with no gum disease, 37% had pre-diabetes, while 10% had
suspected diabetes —figures that are relatively high, but which might be
explained by the lower threshold of 6.5% rather than 7%, which is
commonly used for a diagnosis of type 2 diabetes.
Previously undiagnosed cases of diabetes were found in all three
groups: 8.5% of those with no gum disease; just under 10% of those with
mild to moderate gum disease; and nearly one in five (18%) of those with
the severe form.
This is an observational study so no firm conclusions can be drawn
about cause and effect, but the researchers nevertheless say: “This
confirms the assumption that severe periodontitis could be an early sign
of undiagnosed diabetes.”
They suggest that it would be feasible to screen for undiagnosed
diabetes in dental practices, focusing on people with the most severe
form of gum disease.
Picking up diabetes and pre-diabetes early is essential if its
associated complications are to be avoided, they add. “The early
diagnosis and intervention of (pre) diabetes prevent the common micro
vascular and macro vascular complications and are cost effective,” they
write.
Furthermore, early diagnosis and treatment of diabetes might also
help to stave off the risk of tooth loss that is associated with
longstanding and untreated severe gum disease, they add.