학술논문

Biomarkers of oral inflammation in perinatally HIV‐infected and perinatally HIV‐exposed, uninfected youth.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Clinical Periodontology. Nov2019, Vol. 46 Issue 11, p1072-1082. 11p. 1 Diagram, 2 Charts, 1 Graph.
Subject
*BIOMARKERS
*CYTOKINES
*EXUDATES & transudates
*HIV-positive persons
*INTERLEUKINS
*LONGITUDINAL method
*ORAL hygiene
*PERIODONTICS
*PERIODONTITIS
*PROTEOLYTIC enzymes
*RISK assessment
*STATISTICS
*TOOTH loss
*TUMOR necrosis factors
*DATA analysis
*CROSS-sectional method
*DISEASE progression
*MANN Whitney U Test
*DISEASE risk factors
Language
ISSN
0303-6979
Abstract
Aim: To examine oral biomarkers that have been associated with periodontal disease progression in HIV‐infected adults in perinatally HIV‐infected and HIV‐exposed but uninfected youth. Material and Methods: This was a cross‐sectional, multicentre substudy of youth participating in the Oral Health Pediatric HIV/AIDS Cohort study. Gingival crevicular fluid repository samples from participants with and without periodontal disease (using Gingival Index [GI] and Bleeding on Probing [BOP] parameters on dental examination) were tested for concentration levels of inflammatory biomarkers. Associations were assessed using Wilcoxon test and Spearman correlation. Results: For perinatal HIV youth (n = 129), the markers consistently elevated (p < .05) in sites with GI ≥2 and in sites with BOP were interleukin‐1β, 6 and 13, macrophage inflammatory protein‐1α and metalloproteinase‐9. Serum tumour necrosis factor‐α and soluble CD14 were positively correlated with a summary count of elevated cytokines. No associations were seen among HIV‐uninfected subjects (n = 71). Conclusions: The association of oral biomarkers of inflammation with clinical indicators of periodontal inflammation and systemic immune activation suggests that perinatal HIV‐infected youth may be at higher risk for developing significant periodontal disease, associated with tooth loss and HIV progression. More frequent dental care of this group is needed to prevent potential periodontal progression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]