4.6 Article

A systematic review of definitions of periodontitis and methods that have been used to identify this disease

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PERIODONTOLOGY
Volume 36, Issue 6, Pages 458-467

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-051X.2009.01408.x

Keywords

epidemiology; definition; periodontal disease; periodontitis; systematic review

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Savage Amir, Eaton KA, Moles DR, Needleman I. A systematic review of definitions of periodontitis and methods that have been used to identify this disease. J Clin Periodontol 2009; 36: 458-467. doi: 10.1111/j.1600-051X.2009.01408.x. To perform a systematic review and critical analysis of the definitions of periodontitis and the methods which have been used to identify and measure this disease. Relevant publications were identified after searching MEDLINE, EMBASE, SCISEARCH and LILACS electronic databases. Screening of titles and abstracts and data extraction was conducted independently by two reviewers. To be included in the review, studies were required to define periodontitis and to indicate how it was measured. Studies that related purely to gingivitis, and/or intervention studies, and/or studies where prevalence or severity of periodontitis was not a principal outcome were excluded. From a total of 3472 titles and abstracts, 104 potentially relevant full text papers were identified. Of these, 15 met the criteria for inclusion in the final stage of the review. The survey revealed heterogeneity between the studies in the measurement tools used, particularly the types of probes and the sites and areas of the mouth that were assessed. There was also heterogeneity in the use of clinical attachment loss (CAL) and pocket probing depth (PPD) as criteria for periodontitis. In the 15 studies, the threshold for a diagnosis of periodontitis when CAL was the criterion ranged from 2 to >= 6 mm and when PPD was used, from 3 to >= 6 mm. This review has confirmed previous work which has suggested that epidemiological studies of periodontal diseases are complicated by the diversity of methodologies and definitions used. The studies that were reviewed utilized a minimum diagnostic threshold defining periodontitis, at a given site in terms of CAL of 2 mm and PPD of 3 mm.

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