Dissertação
Associação entre periodontite e câncer de mama: uma revisão sistemática e metanálise
Fecha
2023-07-27Autor
Peixoto, Rhayssa Kuhn
Institución
Resumen
Breast cancer (BC) stands out as the most incident type of cancer in women worldwide.
Periodontitis is a multifactorial chronic inflammatory disease that involves a complex
interaction between pathogenic stimuli and host response, characterized by progressive
destruction of the tooth support apparatus. Systemic dissemination of infectious agents and
inflammatory mediators of periodontitis can lead to a chronic systemic inflammatory condition,
which may be associated with the pathogenesis of distal inflammatory processes such as cancer.
The aim of this study is to systematically review the literature to assess the association between
periodontitis and BC. The research protocol was structured according to the recommendations
of the Cochrane Collaboration. Studies were searched in MEDLINE (via PubMed), EMBASE,
LILACS, Web of Science, Google Scholar, and Open Gray (DANS) electronic databases up to
June 2022. Longitudinal and case-control studies were included. Meta-analyses determined risk
estimates (relative risk; RR and 95% confidence interval; CI). Two independent reviewers
carried out the selection, data extraction, risk of bias assessment (Newcastle-Ottawa Scale) and
quality of evidence (GRADE). A total of seventeen studies were included. Of these, 9 studies
are prospective cohorts, 3 retrospective cohorts and 5 case-controls. The meta-analysis showed
that women with periodontitis have an 18% greater risk of BC occurrence than those without
or with milder forms of periodontitis (RR 1.18; 95% CI 1.05 to 1.33). Subgroup analyzes and
metaregression showed that estimates from studies conducted in middle/lower-middle income
countries and with diagnosis of periodontitis based on clinical examination were significantly
higher than those in high/upper-middle income countries and diagnosed by self-report (p<0.05).
Our findings confirmed that periodontitis is associated with BC and that the origin of the sample
and the diagnosis of periodontitis partly explain the heterogeneity found. A better understanding
of this association may have important clinical and public health implications, given the
possibility that prevention and treatment of periodontitis may minimize the onset or progression
of BC.