The article aims to discuss the IL-1β and TNF-α potential use as salivary biomarkers of periodontal diseases pathogenesis and progression.
This literature review has been registered in PROSPERO database with following number: CRD42016035729. Data investigation was performed on PubMed database as the main source of studies. The following search terms were used: “salivary biomarkers”, “periodontal diseases”, “TNF-alpha”, “Interleukin-1 beta”. Clinical trials and animal experimental models of periodontal disease were included in the discussion. In regards to inclusive dates, published studies from January 2006 to December 2015 were considered in this review along with the mentioned inclusion criteria.
IL-1β and TNF-α salivary levels increased in diseased groups, they were associated with onset and disease severity, and their levels reduced in response to periodontal therapy. IL-1β and TNF-α could be promising biomarkers in the detection of periodontal diseases.
The use of a salivary cytokine-based diagnosis appears to be a screening method capable of diagnosing periodontal diseases in an early fashion, establishing an era of individualized clinical decisions.
Periodontal diseases usually refer to inflammatory disorders that are caused by pathogenic bacteria in the sub gingival biofilm in association with impaired host immune response and connective tissue breakdown. The bacterial challenge exacerbates the cytokine production by the gingival epithelium, resulting in an uncontrolled inflammation that leads to tooth loss in adults from different populations [
The prevalence of these diseases increases with aging, longer retention of teeth, and increased incidence of obesity and diabetes among the population. The prevalence demonstrates an increasing trend and a correlation with numerous comorbidities. Thus, it is relevant to develop new methods capable of detecting these diseases in early stages and following up their progression [
Increased cytokine levels in the saliva and gingival crevicular fluid of patients affected by periodontal diseases are a hallmark of the initiation and maintenance of these pathologies. Salivary fluid is an exocrine secretion consisting of approximately 99% water containing electrolytes, for instance, sodium, potassium, calcium, chloride, magnesium, bicarbonate, phosphate and proteins, such as enzymes, immune globulins and other antimicrobial factors, mucosal glycoproteins, traces of albumin, and some polypeptides and oligopeptides of importance to the oral health. Saliva is critical for the preservation and maintenance of the oral tissues, and it has been used as a source of non-invasive investigation of metabolism and for the elimination of many drugs [
Many contributing inflammatory mediators have been associated with the pathogenesis and progression of periodontal diseases, such as the inflammatory cytokines interleukin-1 beta (IL-1β) and tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α), which seem to play an important role in the focal immunopathology of periodontal diseases. IL-1β secretion pathway is complex, as it requires molecular signals to occur such as exposure to cellular danger or stress signals, culminating in an assembly of inflammasomes, molecular platforms that mediate action of caspase-1 and are essential for the activation of IL-1β [
Furthermore, TNF-α and IL-1βinduce bone resorption and up-regulate prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) and collagenases secretion and are produced by many cell types including macrophages, neutrophils, keratinocytes, fibroblasts, NK cells, T and B cells in the periodontium. These cytokines induce the up-regulation of adhesion molecules on leucocytes and endothelial cells, stimulating the production of chemokines that recruit circulating leucocytes to sites of inflammation, and inducing expression of other inflammatory mediators that potentiate inflammatory responses. Studies have indicated that their levels contribute to the pathogenesis of periodontitis since higher serum levels of IL-1β and TNF-α were detected in periodontitis patients [
This review was conducted following the PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses) statement [
The protocol can be accessed at:
The focus question of this review is whether or not the salivary levels of the inflammatory cytokines IL-1β and TNF-α could be associated with clinical evidence of periodontal tissue breakdown so that they could be used as biological markers of periodontal diseases.
The review included studies on humans and animals published in the English language. Letters, editorials, literature reviews, PhD theses, and abstracts were excluded.
The review included all human prospective follow-up studies and clinical trials, cohort studies, case-control studies, and animal studies published between January 2006 and December 2015, on the use of biological markers of periodontal tissue breakdown as diagnosis tool for periodontal diseases. Case report studies were excluded.
The search strategy incorporated examinations of the electronic database PubMed (National Library of Medicine, NCBI) (
The PubMed database was explored through advanced searches. The search was conducted using the following key words either alone or combined: “salivary biomarkers”, “periodontal diseases”, “Tumour Necrosis Factor-alpha”, “Interleukin-1 beta”. The choice of keywords was intended to be broad, in order to collect as much relevant data as possible without relying on electronic means alone to refine the search results.
The resulting articles were independently subjected to clear inclusion and exclusion criteria by two reviewers. They also compared decisions and resolved differences through discussion, consulting a third party, who was an experienced reviewer, when consensus was not reached.
Inclusion criteria for studies were:
Studies in animal models of marginal periodontitis and case-control, cohort and prospective studies in humans;
Studies that screened and compared salivary levels of IL-1β and/or TNF-α in at least two different experimental pools - control and diseased groups;
Assessment of clinical parameters such as depth and bleeding on probe, radiographic evidence of bone loss, and salivary levels of IL-1β or TNF-α measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA).
Exclusion criteria for studies were:
Case reports and literature reviews were excluded.
Following the initial literature search, all article titles were screened to eliminate irrelevant publications, review articles, and case reports. Thereafter, the selected studies were excluded based on data obtained from screening the abstracts. The final stage of screening involved reading the full texts to confirm eligible studies based on the inclusion and exclusion criteria previously mentioned.
Two different reviewers independently searched for studies on the aforementioned database adopting the described eligibility criteria. All the studies found were then crossed to exclude duplicated ones. As a result, 225 potential articles were obtained at first instance which in turns had their titles and abstracts read and categorised according to the type of study- animal or clinical investigation. Considering the inclusive dates, 144 studies remained for further review, which consisted of the investigation of the association of cytokines IL-1β and TNF-α with periodontal diseases onset, progression, and severity. This final step led to the total of 15 articles which are reviewed and discussed here (
PRISMA flow diagram.
The Cochrane collaboration bias summary for potential bias was used to assess the quality of studies and identify papers with intrinsic flaws in method and design (
Risk of bias table
Study | Year of |
Random |
Allocation |
Blinding of |
Blinding of |
Incomplete |
Selective |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sexton et al. [2] | 2011 | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk |
da Costa et al. [3] | 2015 | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk |
Frodge et al. [4] | 2008 | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk |
Rosa et al. [7] | 2014 | low risk | unclear risk | unclear risk | unclear risk | unclear risk | low risk |
Ma et al. [13] | 2015 | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk |
Zhu et al. [14] | 2015 | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk |
Oh et al. [15] | 2015 | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk |
Miller et al. [16] | 2006 | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk |
Ng et al. [17] | 2007 | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk |
Scannapieco et al. [18] | 2007 | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk |
Reinhardt et al. [19] | 2010 | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk |
Noh et al. [20] | 2013 | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk |
Kato et al. [21] | 2014 | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk |
Liao et al. [22] | 2014 | low risk | unclear risk | unclear risk | low risk | low risk | low risk |
Singh et al. [23] | 2014 | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk | low risk |
Relevant data of interest were collected and organised into
Studies investigating interleukin-1β (IL-1β) expression and periodontal diseases
Study | Study design | Results | Conclusions |
---|---|---|---|
Sexton et al [2] | 6-month case-controlled study of adults with chronic periodontitis. | IL-1β levels decreased significantly in response to periodontal therapy. | Potential utility for monitoring periodontal disease status. |
Rosa et al. [7] | Analysis of proteome results using the OralOme database | IL-1β proposed to be promising but data are scarce. | Further quantitative proteomic studies are needed. |
Ma et al. [13] | Meta-analysis of 20 case-controlled studies. | Association of the IL-1β (3953/4) C→T polymorphism with chronic periodontitis in Asians. | IL-1β (3953/4) C→T polymorphism probably increases the risk of chronic periodontitis in Asians. |
Zhu et al. [14] | Investigation of systemic and local levels of IL-1β, MCP-1, VEGF, PDGF in patients with periodontitis and coronary heart disease. | IL-1β concentrations in the serum and gingival crevicular fluid of the three diseased groups were significantly higher than those in the control group. | IL-1β could play a key role and can be considered a biomarker in the progression of coronary heart disease and chronic periodontitis. |
Oh et al. [15] | Effects of periodontal therapy on clinical parameters and IL-1β levels in patients with chronic periodontitis. | IL-1β concentration was lower at 2 and 4 months after initial therapy at all sites. | These results suggest that IL-1β level in samples reflect disease severity. |
Miller et al. [16] | Levels of IL-1β, MMP-8, and OPG in whole saliva of 57 adults in a case-control trial. | Mean levels of IL-1β in saliva were significantly higher in case subjects than in controls. | Salivary levels of IL-1β appear to serve as biomarkers of periodontitis. |
Ng et al. [17] | Alveolar bone loss and concentration of host-derived bone resorptive factors in saliva of 110 untreated dental patients in a cross-sectional study. | IL-1β levels associated with increased bone loss score. | Biomarkers in saliva may serve as a useful tool to monitor and predict periodontal diseases. |
Scannapieco |
Association of salivary biomarkers with alveolar bone loss from 1,256 post-menopausal women in a case-control study. | Positive association between alveolar bone loss and salivary concentrations of IL-1β. | Salivary biomarkers measured at baseline may serve to predict future alveolar bone loss. |
Reinhardt |
Correlation of salivary biomarkers and bone resorption in a longitudinal trial. | Increasing IL-1β levels in the first year were associated with increased odds of subsequent periodontal attachment loss. | Elevated biomarkers have the potential to identify patients vulnerable to periodontitis. |
Studies investigating tumour necrosis factor - α (TNF-α) expression and periodontal diseases
Study | Study design | Results | Conclusions |
---|---|---|---|
da Costa et al. [3] | Identification of the on-going inflammatory changes and novel biomarkers for periodontitis in a case-controlled study. | TNF-α levels were elevated compared to controls. | TNF-α levels could be of great importance to the assessment of disease progression. |
Frodge et al. [4] | TNF-α levels in unstimulated whole saliva of 74 adults in a case-control clinical study. | Salivary levels of TNF-α were higher in individuals with periodontal disease than in controls. | TNF-α levels could facilitate the screening, diagnosis, and management of periodontal disease. |
Rosa et al. [7] | Analysis of proteome results using the OralOme database. | TNF-α proposed to be promising but data are scarce. | Further quantitative proteomic studies are needed. |
Noh et al. [20] | Quantification TNF-α levels of patients with periodontitis. | TNF-α expression consistently high. | Measurement of TNF-α may be beneficial in the identification of patients with periodontitis. |
Kato et al. [21] | Determine the effect of TNF-α on invasion of |
Invasion of |
Involvement of TNF-α in the onset of periodontal diseases. |
Liao et al. [22] | Simulate the expression of TNF-α of periodontal tissues in rat periodontitis model. | TNF-α expression of the periodontitis group was significantly higher. | TNF-α expression reached higher levels than control groups. |
Singh et al. [23] | Evaluate the effect of type 2 diabetes mellitus and smoking on salivary levels of TNF-α in patients with chronic periodontitis. | Data revealed higher levels of TNF-α in diabetic subjects followed by smokers, and chronic periodontitis group. | Diabetes and smoking exacerbated salivary levels of TNF-α in chronic periodontitis cases. |
No meta-analyses could be performed due to the heterogeneity between the studies.
Two investigators initially carried out the search for studies as presented in
Exclusion of studies
The reasons for excluding studies were irrelevant titles and abstracts were excluded (n = 81) and lack of association of periodontal diseases activity with IL-1β or TNF-α levels (n = 129).
The studies chosen in this review were published between January 2006 and December 2015 and they were designed to show association of periodontal disease activity with IL-1β or TNF-α salivary levels through assessment of clinical parameters such as depth and bleeding on probe, radiographic evidence of bone loss, and salivary levels of IL-1β or TNF-α measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Most studies selected were performed in humans through prospective studies, but also experimental models of periodontitis in animals were included as they were designed to determine the role of these two specific cytokines in the pathogenesis of periodontal diseases.
No meta-analysis was carried out as heterogeneity in the studies design.
Periodontal diseases heavily depend on the host immune response individually. In this scenario, it is predictable that salivary biomarkers could be expressed differently by a subject who over reacts to bacterial challenges, whereas the same levels of inflammatory cytokines could not be involved in the same extent of periodontal tissue loss in a different individual. Thus, the association of salivary levels of IL-1β/TNF-α and connective tissue breakdown has careful in order to validate the use of inflammatory biomarkers to diagnosis periodontal diseases as individual responses may change.
Interleukin-1β is a resulting product of inflammatory and infectious stimuli, contributing to the development of an inflammatory condition. IL-1β genes encode precursor molecules which are turned to mature forms via interleukin-1β convertase activity, cleaving the human 35-kDa IL-1β precursor between aspartic acid 116 and alanine 117 to generate the mature 17-kDa cytokine. The IL-1β active form shows immune potentiating effects, mediating inflammatory responses, bone resorption, leading to apoptosis, cell proliferation and differentiation in response to inflammatory stimuli such as bacterial LPS, promoting recruitment of phagocytes, angiogenesis, epithelial cell repair, and regulation of cytokines and chemokine production by other immune cells at the site of infection or injury, being it an orchestrating cytokine during the immune response [
Many clinical studies reported the use of IL-1β present in saliva or gingival crevicular fluid as a potential biomarker of periodontal disease. Mean levels of salivary IL-1β were significantly higher in patients with periodontal disease than in controls, and they were correlated with individual clinical parameters indicative of periodontal disease. Further, combined elevated salivary levels of IL-1β and matrix metalloproteinase-8 increased the risk of experiencing periodontal disease 45-fold [
In 1,256-postmenopausal population, a 40-subject cohort with significant alveolar bone loss over a 5-year period was compared to 40-age-matched control subjects having no alveolar bone loss. IL-1β, osteonectin, and hepatocyte growth factor were quantified in saliva collected at baseline by immunoassay. Positive association was observed between alveolar bone loss and IL-1β salivary concentrations rather than between the other biomarkers screened in saliva [
In order to determine the profile response to periodontal therapy and the disease status, Sexton et al. [
Furthermore, studies by Zhu et al. [
TNF-α is a pleiotropic pro-inflammatory cytokine released by a variety of different cell types in response to various stimuli, including bacteria, parasites, viruses, cytokines and mitogens. It is involved in systemic and local inflammation via different signal pathways, inducing a broad range of genes. TNF-α regulates a host response to infection and its deregulation is implicated in the pathogenesis of numerous complex diseases, including periodontitis. This cytokine was shown to drive several biological processes such as induction of inflammatory mediators, for instance, matrix metalloproteases, chemokines and prostaglandins, endothelial cell activation and endothelial-leukocyte interactions, monocyte adhesion, mediating bone remodelling, and oxidative processes [
Since TNF-α plays a role in the development and maintenance of inflammatory diseases, its mediating effects on the development, progress, and maintenance of periodontal diseases would be expected to occur. Many clinical trials showed a correlation between high TNF-α levels and periodontitis, results that would enable researchers and clinical practitioners to diagnose and monitor periodontal disease progression. Salivary levels of TNF-α were detected by Frodge et al. [
Additionally, it was performed a periodontitis experimental model to determine the expression of TNF-α and PGE2 in the occurrence and development of periodontitis [
Evaluating the effect of type 2 diabetes mellitus and smoking on salivary TNF-α level in patients with chronic periodontitis compared to healthy individuals, subjects aged between 30 to 35 years old were included in a study and divided into four groups. The results obtained suggested a strong correlation between TNF-α and periodontal disease in the presence of predisposing factors such as smoking and diabetes, which means that not only does this cytokine play a role in the onset of periodontitis but also its response to external factors exacerbates the disease status (
The traditional diagnosis of periodontal diseases is based on clinical parameters such as bleeding on probing, probing pocket depths, and clinical attachment loss. Albeit easy to use, cost-effective and relatively non-invasive, clinical attachment loss evaluation using the periodontal probe requires a 2 - 3 mm threshold change before a site with significant breakdown can be identified. Yet, this is the most used way to determine whether or not any subject is undergoing periodontal tissue destruction, leading to the irreversible dental loss [
However, dental research has developed new technology to help dentists to identify patients who are undergoing pathological processes. In the field of inflammatory research, many studies have been carried out looking at the innovation of diagnosis methods whose advantages could be early detection, a non-invasive approach, high sensitivity and specificity. Thus, this scenario boosts the search for a method capable of diagnosing periodontal diseases in an early fashion, bringing on an era of personalised medicine and individualised clinical decisions. In this regards, it emerges the use of salivary-based diagnosis to which much more attention is currently given.
At present, saliva represents an increasingly useful auxiliary means of diagnosis. Many researchers have made use of sialometry, which measures the saliva flow, and sialochemistry, which measures saliva composition, to diagnose systemic illnesses, monitoring general health, and as an indicator of risk for diseases creating a close relation between oral and systemic health. Because serum components of saliva are derived primarily from the local vasculature that originates from the carotid arteries, saliva has a prodigious fluid source that provides many, if not most, of the same molecules found in the systemic circulation. Thus, researchers involved in periodontal disease diagnostics are currently investigating the possible use of oral fluids, such as saliva, for disease assessment. It could be used to monitor the general health and the onset of specific diseases [
Many analyses associated with periodontitis have been detected in saliva such as cytokines that are host-derived factors that can provide potentially important information regarding periodontal status [
It would be clear to associate high IL-1β salivary levels to periodontal diseases onset or progress as these diseases are inflammatory-mediated. Consequently, progressing periodontal diseases would be directly correlated with high levels of IL-1β in the whole saliva or in the gingival crevicular fluid. Even more than a cause, IL-1β levels concomitantly rise as the disease initiates and develops which permits cytokine quantification in the saliva of susceptible individuals. Thus, the early detection of increasing IL-1β levels would help anticipate the dental tissue breakdown and, therefore, it would make possible to provide those patients with the proper treatment before the irreversible dental loss.
TNF-α might be able to help us identify periodontitis susceptible patients such as those who suffer from diabetes mellitus or smokers. Moreover, TNF-α would be useful as a traceable salivary inflammatory mediator whose levels could be associated with the disease severity, showing its progression, being this possibility is a powerful tool to provide patients with the most suitable treatment according to their disease stage.
Nonetheless, being present in the oral fluids early, even before the periodontal clinical parameters being present, is a remarkable feature that makes possible the cytokine-based diagnosis of periodontal diseases.
In regards to periodontal diseases, studies are needed to sample patients at regular intervals in order to capture biomarkers profiles seen during different phases of active disease. This information can then be used to identify useful key salivary biomarkers associated with the inflammatory patterns and the bone remodelling process through which a patient may undergo. Obstacles to these approaches may appear in the clinical setting whilst the future of periodontal disease diagnosis using salivary screening looks promising.
The field of salivary diagnostics is new and revolutionary. Its emergent and novel status is prominent and many biomarkers have been investigated, albeit few research centres mainly through cross-sectional and animal studies have done the search for new salivary sensors of periodontal diseases. Therefore, it is relevant that the use of salivary biomarkers applied to the diagnosis of periodontal disease could be even more investigated in order to consolidate the existing data related to this topic.
Inflammatory cytokines interleukin-1 beta and tumour necrosis factor-alpha are contributing mediators of periodontal diseases and they are present in the saliva in early stages as well as their levels increased with the disease progression. Therefore, they might show reliability in regards the periodontal disease diagnosis, being useful as biomarkers and promising tools in the early diagnosis of periodontal diseases.
This work was supported by Fundação Cearense de Apoio ao Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (FUNCAP), Conselho Nacional de Pesquisa (CNPq), Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES).
The authors declare no conflict of interests regarding the publication of this article.