Aim: To investigate whether oral microbiome diversity is associated with all-cause mortality in the general US population and in individuals with chronic diseases.
Materials and methods: We included 8224 individuals with oral microbiome diversity data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (2009-2012), representing 164,000,205 US adults, using a survey-weighted analysis method. Cox regression analyses were performed to identify the association between oral microbiome diversity and all-cause mortality.
Results: During a survey-weighted mean follow-up period of 8.86 years, 429 all-cause deaths (survey-weighted number: 7,124,920) occurred in 8224 participants. Cox regression analysis revealed that higher oral microbiome diversity was significantly associated with a lower all-cause mortality risk. Significant differences in all-cause mortality risk were observed among the different clusters based on oral microbiome β-diversity (log-rank p < 0.001). Subgroup analyses revealed that the oral microbiome diversity was independently associated with all-cause mortality in individuals with diabetes mellitus and hypertension. A multivariate logistic regression model showed that current smoking and antibiotic use were significantly associated with lower oral microbiome α diversity.
Conclusions: Higher oral microbiome diversity was significantly associated with a lower all-cause mortality risk in the general US population and in individuals with diabetes mellitus and hypertension.
Keywords: extraoral chronic diseases; general US population; lifestyles intervention; long‐term prognosis; oral microbiome diversity.
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