International Dental Journal (Feb 2021)

Developing a Standard Set of Patient-centred Outcomes for Adult Oral Health – An International, Cross-disciplinary Consensus

  • Richeal Ni Riordain,
  • Michael Glick,
  • Shiamaa Shihab Ahmed Al Mashhadani,
  • Krishna Aravamudhan,
  • Jane Barrow,
  • Deborah Cole,
  • James J. Crall,
  • Jennifer E. Gallagher,
  • Jacqui Gibson,
  • Shalika Hegde,
  • Rebekah Kaberry,
  • Elsbeth Kalenderian,
  • Anup Karki,
  • Roger Keller Celeste,
  • Stefan Listl,
  • Stacie N. Myers,
  • Richard Niederman,
  • Tania Severin,
  • Mark W. Smith,
  • W. Murray Thomson,
  • Georgios Tsakos,
  • Marko Vujicic,
  • Richard G. Watt,
  • Sarah Whittaker,
  • David M. Williams

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 71, no. 1
pp. 40 – 52

Abstract

Read online

Objective: To develop a minimum Adult Oral Health Standard Set (AOHSS) for use in clinical practice, research, advocacy and population health. Materials and methods: An international oral health working group (OHWG) was established, of patient advocates, researchers, clinicians and public health experts to develop an AOHSS. PubMed was searched for oral health clinical and patient-reported measures and case-mix variables related to caries and periodontal disease. The selected patient-reported outcome measures focused on general oral health, and oral health-related quality of life tools. A consensus was reached via Delphi with parallel consultation of subject matter content experts. Finally, comments and input were elicited from oral health stakeholders globally, including patients/consumers. Results: The literature search yielded 1,453 results. After inclusion/exclusion criteria, 959 abstracts generated potential outcomes and case-mix variables. Delphi rounds resulted in a consensus-based selection of 80 individual items capturing 31 outcome and case-mix concepts. Global reviews generated 347 responses from 87 countries, and the patient/consumer validation survey elicited 129 responses. This AOHSS includes 25 items directed towards patients (including demographics, the impact of their oral health on oral function, a record of pain and oral hygiene practices, and financial implications of care) and items for clinicians to complete, including medical history, a record of caries and periodontal disease activity, and types of dental treatment delivered. Conclusion: In conclusion, utilising a robust methodology, a standardised core set of oral health outcome measures for adults, with a particular emphasis on caries and periodontal disease, was developed.

Keywords