Oral health-related quality of life in 4-16-year-olds with and without juvenile idiopathic arthritis
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/27358Date
2022-09-06Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Gil, Elisabeth Grut; Skeie, Marit Slåttelid; Halbig, Josefine Mareile; Jönsson, Birgitta; Lie, Stein Atle; Rygg, Marite; Fischer, Johannes Maria; Rosén, Annika; Bletsa, Athanasia; Luukko, Keijo; Shi, Xie-Qi; Frid, Paula Hanna Therese; Cetrelli, Lena Elisabet; Tylleskär, Karin; Rosendahl, Karen; Åstrøm, Anne-Kristine NAbstract
Background: Few studies have investigated oral health-related quality of life (OHRQoL) in young individuals with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA). Aims were to investigate whether OHRQoL difers between children and adolescents with JIA compared to controls without JIA, while adjusting for socio-demographic-, behavioral- and oral healthrelated covariates. Furthermore, to explore whether socio-behavioral and oral health-related covariates of OHRQoL vary according to group afliation and fnally, specifcally for individuals with JIA, to investigate whether diseasespecifc features associate with OHRQoL. We hypothesized that participants with JIA have poorer OHRQoL compared to participants without JIA.
Methods: In this comparative cross-sectional study participants with JIA (n=224) were matched to controls without JIA (n=224). OHRQoL was assessed according to Early Childhood Oral Health Impact Scale (ECOHIS) (4–11-years-olds) and the child version of Oral Impacts on Daily Performances (Child-OIDP) (12–16-years-olds). JIA-specifc character‑ istics were assessed by pediatric rheumatologists and socio-demographic, behavioral and self-reported oral health information collected by questionnaires. Index teeth were examined for caries by calibrated dentists. Multiple variable analyses were performed using logistic regression, reporting odds ratio (OR) and 95% confdence interval (CI). Twoway interactions were tested between group afliation and the socio-behavioral- and oral health-related variables on the respective outcome variables.
Results: In total, 96 participants with JIA and 98 controls were evaluated according to ECOHIS, corresponding numbers for Child-OIDP was 125 and 124. Group afliation was not associated with impaired ECOHIS or Child-OIDP in adjusted analyses (OR=1.95, 95% CI 0.94–4.04 and OR=0.99, 95% CI 0.46–2.17, respectively). Female adolescents with JIA were more likely than males to report oral impacts according to Child-OIDP. Continued activity or fare was found to adversely afect Child-OIDP, also self-reported outcome measures in JIA associated with Child-OIDP.
Conclusions: This study did not provide consistent evidence to confrm the hypothesis that children and ado‑ lescents with JIA are more likely to have impaired OHRQoL compared to their peers without JIA. However, female adolescents with JIA were more likely than males to report impacts on OHRQoL. Furthermore, within the JIA group, adolescents with continued disease activity, fare or reporting pain, physical disability, had higher risk than their coun‑
terparts of impaired OHRQoL.
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BMCCitation
Gil, Skeie, Halbig, Jönsson, Lie, Rygg, Fischer, Rosén, Bletsa, Luukko, Shi, Frid, Cetrelli, Tylleskär, Rosendahl, Åstrøm. Oral health-related quality of life in 4-16-year-olds with and without juvenile idiopathic arthritis. BMC Oral Health. 2022;22:387:1-16Metadata
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