TY - JOUR
T1 - Oral frailty indicators to target major adverse health-related outcomes in older age: a systematic review
AU - Dibello, Vittorio
AU - Lobbezoo, Frank
AU - Lozupone, Madia
AU - Sardone, Rodolfo
AU - Ballini, Andrea
AU - Berardino, Giuseppe
AU - Mollica, Anita
AU - Coelho-Júnior, Hélio José
AU - De Pergola, Giovanni
AU - Stallone, Roberta
AU - Dibello, Antonio
AU - Daniele, Antonio
AU - Petruzzi, Massimo
AU - Santarcangelo, Filippo
AU - Solfrizzi, Vincenzo
AU - Manfredini, Daniele
AU - Panza, Francesco
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - A well-preserved oral function is key to accomplishing essential daily tasks. However, in geriatric medicine and gerodontology, as age-related physiological decline disrupts several biological systems pathways, achieving this objective may pose a challenge. We aimed to make a systematic review of the existing literature on the relationships between poor oral health indicators contributing to the oral frailty phenotype, defined as an age-related gradual loss of oral function together with a decline in cognitive and physical functions, and a cluster of major adverse health-related outcomes in older age, including mortality, physical frailty, functional disability, quality of life, hospitalization, and falls. Six different electronic databases were consulted by two independent researchers, who found 68 eligible studies published from database inception to September 10, 2022. The risk of bias was evaluated using the National Institutes of Health Quality Assessment Toolkits for Observational Cohort and Cross-Sectional Studies. The study is registered on PROSPERO (CRD42021241075). Eleven different indicators of oral health were found to be related to adverse outcomes, which we grouped into four different categories: oral health status deterioration; decline in oral motor skills; chewing, swallowing, and saliva disorders; and oral pain. Oral health status deterioration, mostly number of teeth, was most frequently associated with all six adverse health-related outcomes, followed by chewing, swallowing, and saliva disorders associated with mortality, physical frailty, functional disability, hospitalization, and falls, then decline in oral motor skills associated with mortality, physical frailty, functional disability, hospitalization, and quality of life, and finally oral pain was associated only with physical frailty. The present findings could help to assess the contribution of each oral health indicator to the development of major adverse health-related outcomes in older age. These have important implications for prevention, given the potential reversibility of all these factors.
AB - A well-preserved oral function is key to accomplishing essential daily tasks. However, in geriatric medicine and gerodontology, as age-related physiological decline disrupts several biological systems pathways, achieving this objective may pose a challenge. We aimed to make a systematic review of the existing literature on the relationships between poor oral health indicators contributing to the oral frailty phenotype, defined as an age-related gradual loss of oral function together with a decline in cognitive and physical functions, and a cluster of major adverse health-related outcomes in older age, including mortality, physical frailty, functional disability, quality of life, hospitalization, and falls. Six different electronic databases were consulted by two independent researchers, who found 68 eligible studies published from database inception to September 10, 2022. The risk of bias was evaluated using the National Institutes of Health Quality Assessment Toolkits for Observational Cohort and Cross-Sectional Studies. The study is registered on PROSPERO (CRD42021241075). Eleven different indicators of oral health were found to be related to adverse outcomes, which we grouped into four different categories: oral health status deterioration; decline in oral motor skills; chewing, swallowing, and saliva disorders; and oral pain. Oral health status deterioration, mostly number of teeth, was most frequently associated with all six adverse health-related outcomes, followed by chewing, swallowing, and saliva disorders associated with mortality, physical frailty, functional disability, hospitalization, and falls, then decline in oral motor skills associated with mortality, physical frailty, functional disability, hospitalization, and quality of life, and finally oral pain was associated only with physical frailty. The present findings could help to assess the contribution of each oral health indicator to the development of major adverse health-related outcomes in older age. These have important implications for prevention, given the potential reversibility of all these factors.
KW - Falls
KW - Functional disability
KW - Hospitalization
KW - Mortality
KW - Oral health
KW - Physical frailty
KW - Quality of life
KW - Falls
KW - Functional disability
KW - Hospitalization
KW - Mortality
KW - Oral health
KW - Physical frailty
KW - Quality of life
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/220325
U2 - 10.1007/s11357-022-00663-8
DO - 10.1007/s11357-022-00663-8
M3 - Article
SN - 2509-2715
SP - N/A-N/A
JO - GeroScience
JF - GeroScience
ER -