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Heritability of Caries Scores, Trajectories, and Disease Subtypes

Authors :
Nicholas J. Timpson
Patrik K. E. Magnusson
Anders Esberg
Ingegerd Johansson
Simon Haworth
Ralf Kuja-Halkola
P. Lif Holgerson
Paul W. Franks
Source :
Haworth, S, Esberg, A, Lif Holgerson, P, Kuja-Halkola, R, Timpson, N J, Magnusson, P K E, Franks, P W & Johansson, I 2020, ' Heritability of Caries Scores, Trajectories and Disease Subtypes ', Journal of Dental Research ., Journal of Dental Research, University of Bristol-PURE
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Umeå universitet, Institutionen för odontologi, 2020.

Abstract

Previous studies report that dental caries is partially heritable, but there is uncertainty in the magnitude of genetic effects and little understanding of how genetic factors might influence caries progression or caries subtypes. This study aimed to estimate the relative importance of genetic and environmental factors in the etiology of different caries outcomes using a twin-based design. Analysis included up to 41,678 twins in the Swedish Twin Register aged 7 to 97 y, and dental data were obtained from preexisting dental records. The outcome measures were 1) summary indices of caries experience, 2) parameters representing trajectory in caries progression derived from longitudinal modeling, and 3) caries scores in groups of biologically similar tooth surfaces derived from hierarchical clustering of tooth surfaces (termed caries clusters). Additive genetic factors explained between 49.1% and 62.7% of variation in caries scores and between 50.0% and 60.5% of variation in caries trajectories. Seven caries clusters were identified, which had estimates of heritability lying between 41.9% and 54.3%. Shared environmental factors were important for only some of these clusters and explained 16% of variation in fissure caries in molar teeth but little variation in other clusters of caries presentation. The genetic factors influencing these clusters were only partially overlapping, suggesting that different biological processes are important in different groups of tooth surfaces and that innate liability to some patterns of caries presentation may partially explain why groups of tooth surfaces form clusters within the mouth. These results provide 1) improved quantification of genetic factors in the etiology of caries and 2) new data about the role of genetics in terms of longitudinal changes in caries status and specific patterns of disease presentation, and they may help lay the foundations for personalized interventions in the future.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Haworth, S, Esberg, A, Lif Holgerson, P, Kuja-Halkola, R, Timpson, N J, Magnusson, P K E, Franks, P W & Johansson, I 2020, ' Heritability of Caries Scores, Trajectories and Disease Subtypes ', Journal of Dental Research ., Journal of Dental Research, University of Bristol-PURE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dfeb481d125ce7f0bd9a7dfbb1c85ff3