PLoS ONE (Jan 2019)

Oral mucosal lesions and risk of all-cause and cardiovascular mortality in people treated with long-term haemodialysis: The ORAL-D multinational cohort study.

  • Marinella Ruospo,
  • Suetonia C Palmer,
  • Giusi Graziano,
  • Patrizia Natale,
  • Valeria Saglimbene,
  • Massimo Petruzzi,
  • Michele De Benedittis,
  • Jonathan C Craig,
  • David W Johnson,
  • Pauline Ford,
  • Marcello Tonelli,
  • Eduardo Celia,
  • Ruben Gelfman,
  • Miguel R Leal,
  • Marietta Török,
  • Paul Stroumza,
  • Luc Frantzen,
  • Anna Bednarek-Skublewska,
  • Jan Dulawa,
  • Domingo Del Castillo,
  • Staffan Schön,
  • Amparo G Bernat,
  • Jörgen Hegbrant,
  • Charlotta Wollheim,
  • Letizia Gargano,
  • Giovanni F M Strippoli,
  • ORAL-D Investigators

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0218684
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 6
p. e0218684

Abstract

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BackgroundChronic kidney disease is a risk factor for oral diseases, which may be associated with premature death. We evaluated the risk of all-cause and cardiovascular mortality associated with oral mucosal lesions in adults with kidney failure treated with long-term haemodialysis.MethodsOral mucosal lesions (herpes, ulceration, neoformation, white lesion, red lesion, oral candidiasis, geographical tongue, petechial lesions, and fissured tongue) were evaluated within the Oral Diseases in Haemodialysis (ORAL-D) study, a multinational cohort study of 4726 haemodialysis adults. We conducted cox regression analyses adjusted for demographic and clinical variables to evaluate the association with all-cause and cardiovascular mortality.ResultsOverall, 4205 adults (mean age 61.6 ± 15.6 years) underwent oral mucosal examination with 40% affected by at least one lesion. The prevalence of oral lesions was (in order of frequency): oral herpes 0.5%, mucosal ulceration 1.7%, neoformation 2.0%, white lesion 3.5%, red lesion 4.0%, oral candidiasis 4.6%, geographical tongue 4.9%, petechial lesions 7.9%, and fissured tongue 10.7%. During median follow-up of 3.5 years, 2114 patients died (1013 due to cardiovascular disease). No association was observed between any individual oral lesion and all-cause or cardiovascular mortality when adjusted for comorbidities, except for oral candidiasis, which was associated with all-cause mortality (adjusted hazard ratio 1.37, 95% CI 1.00 to 1.86) and cardiovascular mortality (adjusted hazard ratio 1.64, 95% CI 1.09 to 2.46).ConclusionOral mucosal lesions are prevalent in haemodialysis patients. Oral candidiasis appears to be a risk factor for death due to cardiovascular diseases.