On the mortality of patients treated with dental implants: Association to age, degree of tooth loss, and treatment modality
Sammanfattning
Rehabilitation of partially or completely edentulous patients with implant-supported prostheses is a common treatment in dentistry. Clinical studies evaluating this type of treatment have largely focused on technical and biolog-ical complications. To date, only a few studies have investigated the survival of edentulous patients and the possible effects of prosthetic treatments and age at time of edentulism.
The overall aim of this thesis was to analyse the mortality of partially or completely edentulous patients in different age groups treated with implant-supported prostheses. The mortality of a large group of patients who were either treated at the Brånemark clinic, Region Västra Götaland (I-III), or in other parts of Sweden (IV) was studied with regard to degree of tooth loss and compared with a reference population matched for age and gender. Comparisons of mor-tality were performed on the basis of the treatment modality in relation to the degree of tooth loss (I, II) and between two treatments f0r edentulous patients (IV). Causes of death, as described by ICD10, were analysed in the edentulous patients and compared with the expected frequency of death cause in a reference population (III). The patients’ socio-economic situation was extracted from Statistics Sweden and the implant and denture groups were compared (IV).
The results indicated that completely edentulous patients had a higher mor-tality compared to partially edentulous individuals. Compared to a matched reference population, elderly patients (≥80 years) treated with implant-supported prostheses had lower mortality and younger edentulous patients (≤59 years) had higher mortality. A majority of the patients died due to diseas-es in the circulatory system (CVD) and the incidence of CVD-related deaths was highest in the younger patient group. Patients treated with implant-supported prostheses had, in general, a lower ten-year mortality rate compared to patients who received a removable denture irrespective of socioeconomic status.
In Sweden, edentulous patients, especially younger patients, belong to a special group of dentistry patients. As these patients often have poor general health, they should receive special attention. Although this thesis does not assume being treated with implant-supported prothesis per se causes lower mortality, the thesis does assume it contributes to better nutrition, improved masticatory function, and an increased quality of life.
Delarbeten
I. Kowar J, Stenport V, Jemt T. (2014). Mortality patterns in partially edentulous and edentulous elderly patients treated with dental implants. Int J Prosthodont. 2014 May-Jun;27(3):250-6. ::doi::10.11607/ijp.3780 II. Jemt T, Kowar J, Nilsson M, Stenport V. (2015). Patterns of mortality in patients treated with dental im-plants: A comparison of patient age groups and corre-sponding reference populations. Int J Prosthodont. 2015 Nov-Dec;28(6):569-76. :doi::10.11607/ijp.4644 III. Kowar J, Stenport V, Nilsson M, Jemt T. (2019). Causes of death in implant patients treated in the edentulous jaw: A comparison between 2098 deceased patients and the Swedish national cause of death register. Int J Dent. 2019 Mar11;2019:7315081. ::doi::10.1155/2019/7315081 IV. Kowar J, Stenport V, Nilsson M, Jemt T. (2020).Mortality in edentulous patients: A registry-based cohort study in Sweden comparing 8463 patients treated with re-movable dentures or implant-supported dental prostheses. Manuscript Submitted.
Examinationsnivå
Doctor of Philosophy (Odontology)
Universitet
University of Gothenburg. Sahlgrenska Academy
Institution
Institute of Odontology. Department of Prosthetic Dentistry/Dental Material Science
Disputation
Fredagen den 29 januari 2021, kl. 9.00, Hörsal Arvid Carlsson, Academicum, Medicinaregatan 3
Datum för disputation
2021-01-29
E-post
jan.kowar@vgregion.se
Datum
2020-12-15Författare
Kowar, Jan
Nyckelord
Mortality
age
socioeconomic status
edentulous
dental implant
Publikationstyp
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-8009-126-8 (TRYCK)
978-91-8009-127-5 (PDF)
Språk
eng