Journal of Personalized Medicine (Mar 2021)

Salivary Biomarkers for Dental Caries Detection and Personalized Monitoring

  • Pune N. Paqué,
  • Christopher Herz,
  • Daniel B. Wiedemeier,
  • Konstantinos Mitsakakis,
  • Thomas Attin,
  • Kai Bao,
  • Georgios N. Belibasakis,
  • John P. Hays,
  • Joël S. Jenzer,
  • Wendy E. Kaman,
  • Michal Karpíšek,
  • Philipp Körner,
  • Johannes R. Peham,
  • Patrick R. Schmidlin,
  • Thomas Thurnheer,
  • Florian J. Wegehaupt,
  • Nagihan Bostanci

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm11030235
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 3
p. 235

Abstract

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This study investigated the potential of salivary bacterial and protein markers for evaluating the disease status in healthy individuals or patients with gingivitis or caries. Saliva samples from caries- and gingivitis-free individuals (n = 18), patients with gingivitis (n = 17), or patients with deep caries lesions (n = 38) were collected and analyzed for 44 candidate biomarkers (cytokines, chemokines, growth factors, matrix metalloproteinases, a metallopeptidase inhibitor, proteolytic enzymes, and selected oral bacteria). The resulting data were subjected to principal component analysis and used as a training set for random forest (RF) modeling. This computational analysis revealed four biomarkers (IL-4, IL-13, IL-2-RA, and eotaxin/CCL11) to be of high importance for the correct depiction of caries in 37 of 38 patients. The RF model was then used to classify 10 subjects (five caries-/gingivitis-free and five with caries), who were followed over a period of six months. The results were compared to the clinical assessments of dental specialists, revealing a high correlation between the RF prediction and the clinical classification. Due to the superior sensitivity of the RF model, there was a divergence in the prediction of two caries and four caries-/gingivitis-free subjects. These findings suggest IL-4, IL-13, IL-2-RA, and eotaxin/CCL11 as potential salivary biomarkers for identifying noninvasive caries. Furthermore, we suggest a potential association between JAK/STAT signaling and dental caries onset and progression.

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