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University of North Carolina Caries Risk Assessment Study. III. Multiple Factors in Caries Prevalence
Authors:Richard C. Graves DDS  DrPH    James R. Abernathy PhD    Judith A. Disney DMD  MPH    John W. Stamm DDS  DDPH  MScD   Harry M. Bohannan DMD  MSD
Affiliation:Department of Dental Ecology, School of Dentistry, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 27599-7450.
Abstract:
The baseline caries experienced of approximately 5,000 children in South Carolina and Maine was used as the dependent variable in caries risk assessment analyses. Clinical, microbiologic, and demographic factors served as independent variables in a multivariate relationship to caries through regression and discriminant function analyses. Four factors--number of dental visits by the child in the past year, presence of white spot lesions, and both the urgency of need for restorative care and the future caries increment predicted by the examiner--associated significantly and consistently with caries prevalence in primary and permanent teeth of first and fifth graders at both study sites. Several factors associated significantly with caries prevalence at only one site or grade within a site, suggesting that wide applicability of a specific caries risk assessment model may be limited. In these analyses, sensitivity ranged from .60 to .72 and specificity varied from .86 to .91 in the four grade-site groups. The ultimate goal of this longitudinal study is to identify highly caries-prone children in time to prevent the occurrence of a future caries increment. Although the lack of consistent association of many variables, including microbiologic factors, with baseline caries prevalence was unexpected, it is expected that some of these variables will contribute predictive power in the prospective study.
Keywords:caries prediction    predictive factors    clinical
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