BMC Oral Health, 2022

The validity of self-reported number of teeth and edentulousness among Norwegian older adults, the HUNT Study

Background: Number of teeth is an established indicator of oral health and is commonly self-reported in epidemio‑logical studies due to the costly and labor-intensive nature of clinical examinations. Although previous studies have found self-reported number of teeth to be a reasonably accurate measure, its accuracy among older adults≥70 years is less explored. The aim of this study was to assess the validity of self-reported number of teeth and edentulousness in older adults and to investigate factors that may afect the accuracy of self-reports.

Methods: This study included two diferent samples of older adults≥70 years drawn from the fourth wave of the Trøndelag Health Study (the HUNT Study), Norway. Sample 1 (n=586) was used to evaluate the validity of selfreported number of teeth and sample 2 (n=518) was used to evaluate self-reported edentulousness. Information on number of teeth and background variables (education, smoking, cognitive function, and self-perceived general and oral health) were self-reported in questionnaires, while clinical oral health examinations assessed number of teeth, number of teeth restored or replaced by fxed prosthodontics and edentulousness. Spearman and Pearson correlation coefcients, Bland–Altman plot, chi-square test and kappa statistics were used to assess the agreement between selfreported and clinically recorded number of teeth.

Results: The mean diference between self-reported and clinically recorded number of teeth was low (−0.22 teeth), and more than 70% of the participants reported their number of teeth within an error of two teeth. Correlations between self-reports and clinical examinations were high for the total sample (0.86 (Spearman) and 0.91 (Pearson)). However, a lower correlation was found among participants with dementia (0.74 (Spearman) and 0.85 (Pearson)), par‑ticipants having≥20 teeth (0.76 (Spearman) and 0.67 (Pearson)), and participants with≥5 teeth restored or replaced by fxed prosthodontics (0.75 (Spearman) and 0.77 (Pearson)). Self-reports of having teeth or being edentulous were correct in 96.3% of the cases (kappa value 0.93, p value<0.001).

Conclusions: Among older Norwegian adults, self-reported number of teeth agreed closely with clinical tooth counts and nearly all the edentulous participants correctly reported having no teeth.

Forfatter(e)

Hedda Høvik, Marit Kolberg, Linda Gjøra, Line Cathrine Nymoen, Rasa Skudutyte-Rysstad, Lene Hystad Hove, Yi-Qian Sun & Tone Natland Fagerhaug

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