Background: Periodontal disease has been linked to systemic diseases/disorders and a low-grade systemic inflammatory status originated from periodontitis has been proposed as a possible explanation for this association. This study evaluates the relationship, early in pregnancy, between gingival crevicular fluid (GCF) and serum levels of a panel of cytokines that have been implicated in PTB and periodontal disease.
Methods: One hundred pregnant women aged 18-35 years old with a gestational age up to 20 weeks were included (mean±SD gestational age:16.1±3.5 weeks). Four periodontal sites per subject were randomly selected for GCF collection. Serum and GCF levels of IL-1β, IL-6, IL-8, IL-10, IL-12p70 and TNF-α were analyzed using a cytometric bead array. Regression and correlation analyses were used to assess the relationship between serum and GCF cytokine levels.
Results: Participants had widespread periodontal inflammation but limited periodontal destruction. Cytokine levels were significantly higher in GCF than serum for all cytokines but IL-10. GCF levels had small but significant effect on serum levels for IL-10 (β=0.34±0.09, p<0.01), IL-12p70 (β=0.48±0.08, p<0.01) and TNF-α (β=0.29±0.09, p<0.01). Periodontal probing depth and bleeding on probing were significantly associated with GCF levels for IL-1β, IL-6 and IL-8; however, they had negligible effect on serum cytokine levels. Correlation between GCF and serum levels was non-significant, except for IL-12p70, which showed a significant but small correlation between the two sources (r=0.32, p=0.001).
Conclusions: GCF cytokine levels were not strongly associated with serum cytokine levels in pregnant women with widespread periodontal inflammation but limited periodontal destruction.
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