Risk factors of chronic periodontitis on healing response: a multilevel modelling analysis
- PMID: 28915872
- PMCID: PMC5603071
- DOI: 10.1186/s12911-017-0533-2
Risk factors of chronic periodontitis on healing response: a multilevel modelling analysis
Abstract
Background: Chronic periodontitis is a multifactorial polygenetic disease with an increasing number of associated factors that have been identified over recent decades. Longitudinal epidemiologic studies have demonstrated that the risk factors were related to the progression of the disease. A traditional multivariate regression model was used to find risk factors associated with chronic periodontitis. However, the approach requirement of standard statistical procedures demands individual independence. Multilevel modelling (MLM) data analysis has widely been used in recent years, regarding thorough hierarchical structuring of the data, decomposing the error terms into different levels, and providing a new analytic method and framework for solving this problem. The purpose of our study is to investigate the relationship of clinical periodontal index and the risk factors in chronic periodontitis through MLM analysis and to identify high-risk individuals in the clinical setting.
Methods: Fifty-four patients with moderate to severe periodontitis were included. They were treated by means of non-surgical periodontal therapy, and then made follow-up visits regularly at 3, 6, and 12 months after therapy. Each patient answered a questionnaire survey and underwent measurement of clinical periodontal parameters.
Results: Compared with baseline, probing depth (PD) and clinical attachment loss (CAL) improved significantly after non-surgical periodontal therapy with regular follow-up visits at 3, 6, and 12 months after therapy. The null model and variance component models with no independent variables included were initially obtained to investigate the variance of the PD and CAL reductions across all three levels, and they showed a statistically significant difference (P < 0.001), thus establishing that MLM data analysis was necessary. Site-level had effects on PD and CAL reduction; those variables could explain 77-78% of PD reduction and 70-80% of CAL reduction at 3, 6, and 12 months. Other levels only explain 20-30% of PD and CAL reductions. Site-level had the greatest effect on PD and CAL reduction.
Conclusions: Non-surgical periodontal therapy with regular follow-up visits had a remarkable curative effect. All three levels had a substantial influence on the reduction of PD and CAL. Site-level had the largest effect on PD and CAL reductions.
Keywords: Chronic periodontitis; Multilevel modelling; Prognosis; Risk factors.
Conflict of interest statement
Ethics approval and consent to participate
All of Eligible patients who agreed to participate were asked to complete an in-person verbally administered survey. Written consent was obtained prior to the study participation. To ensure that each participant, regardless of his or her literacy level, understood and was willing to participate in the study, the consent form was read to all participants and they consented to the collection of data for the analysis of clinical research. And the research protocol was approved by the China Medical University (2012–02).
Consent for publication
Not applicable.
Competing interests
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
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