Abstract

Background: Periodontitis (a bacterially-driven, inflammatory disease) is a plausible risk factor for prediabetes and diabetes. We studied the association between clinical attachment loss (CAL – a cumulative measure of tooth-supporting tissues lost due to periodontitis), prediabetes, and glucose levels among non-diabetic younger adults. Hypothesis: We hypothesize that greater CAL is associated with higher levels of biomarkers of cardiometabolic risk cross-sectionally. Methods: We included n=1071 non-diabetic participants from the Oral Infections, Glucose Intolerance and Insulin Resistance Study (ORIGINS) who underwent full-mouth periodontal examinations and provided fasting blood at baseline. Baseline enrollment occurred in two waves: Wave 1 (2011-2013; n=293) and Wave 2 (2016-2020; n=778). HbA1c and glucose were measured during clinical exams. Prediabetes was defined as fasting glucose between 100-125 mg/dL or HbA1c between 5.7-6.4% per American Diabetes Association guidelines. We computed prevalence ratios and 95% confidence intervals of prediabetes among 2 nd and 3 rd CAL tertiles (vs. 1 st tertile) via multivariable Poisson regression with robust variance estimation. Multivariable linear regression was used to assess the association between CAL tertiles (independent variable) and estimates of glucose and HbA1c. We adjusted for demographics, health variables, and study wave. Results: The mean age(SD) of participants was 32.3(9.6) years and 28% were male. Prediabetes prevalence was 8.7%. Multivariable adjusted prevalence ratios (95%CIs) for prediabetes in tertiles 2 and 3 (vs. 1) were 1.45(0.79,2.67) and 1.91(0.99,3.67), respectively, consistent with p for trend = 0.05 and stronger associations with continuous glucose and HbA1c (see Table ). Conclusion: CAL, a cumulative measure of periodontitis, was cross-sectionally associated with increased prediabetes prevalence, glucose and HbA1c.

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