4.7 Article

Microbial Indicators of Dental Health, Dysbiosis, and Early Childhood Caries

Journal

JOURNAL OF DENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 102, Issue 7, Pages 759-766

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/00220345231160756

Keywords

saliva; dental plaque; dental caries; child; 16S rRNA; antibiotics

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This study assessed the associations between the oral microbiome and caries risk factors in children, and characterized the microbial communities in saliva and dental plaque before clinical diagnosis of caries. The findings showed that the oral microbiome was influenced by factors such as antibiotic use, demographics, and dietary habits. Up to 3 years prior to clinical caries detection, the oral microbial communities were already in a dysbiotic state dominated by proteolytic taxa.
Dental caries lesions are a clinical manifestation of disease, preceded by microbial dysbiosis, which is poorly characterized and thought to be associated with saccharolytic taxa. Here, we assessed the associations between the oral microbiome of children and various caries risk factors such as demographics and behavioral and clinical data across early childhood and characterized over time the salivary and dental plaque microbiome of children before clinical diagnosis of caries lesions. Children (N = 266) were examined clinically at similar to 1, 2.5, 4, and 6.5 y of age. The microbiome samples were collected at 1, 2.5, and 4 y. Caries groups consisted of children who remained caries free (International Caries Detection and Assessment System [ICDAS] = 0) at all time points (CFAT) (n = 50); children diagnosed with caries (ICDAS >= 1) at 6.5 y (C6.5), 4 y (C4), or 2.5 y of age (C2.5); and children with early caries or advanced caries lesions at specific time points. Microbial community analyses were performed on zero-radius operational taxonomic units (zOTUs) obtained from V4 of 16S ribosomal RNA gene amplicon sequences. The oral microbiome of the children was affected by various factors, including antibiotic use, demographics, and dietary habits of the children and their caregivers. At all time points, various risk factors explained more of the variation in the dental plaque microbiome than in saliva. At 1 y, composition of saliva of the C4 group differed from that of the CFAT group, while at 2.5 y, this difference was observed only in plaque. At 4 y, multiple salivary and plaque zOTUs of genera Prevotella and Leptotrichia were significantly higher in samples of the C6.5 group than those of the CFAT group. In conclusion, up to 3 y prior to clinical caries detection, the oral microbial communities were already in a state of dysbiosis that was dominated by proteolytic taxa. Plaque discriminated dysbiotic oral ecosystems from healthy ones better than saliva.

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