Precision Medicine in Oral Health and Diseases: A Systematic Review

Precision medicine (PM) is personalized medicine that can develop targeted medical therapies for the individual patient, in which "omics" sciences lead to an integration of data that leads to highly predictive models of the functioning of the individual biological system. They enable rapid...

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Published inJournal of personalized medicine Vol. 13; no. 5; p. 725
Main Authors Malcangi, Giuseppina, Patano, Assunta, Guglielmo, Mariafrancesca, Sardano, Roberta, Palmieri, Giulia, Di Pede, Chiara, de Ruvo, Elisabetta, Inchingolo, Alessio Danilo, Mancini, Antonio, Inchingolo, Francesco, Bordea, Ioana Roxana, Dipalma, Gianna, Inchingolo, Angelo Michele
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland MDPI AG 25.04.2023
MDPI
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Summary:Precision medicine (PM) is personalized medicine that can develop targeted medical therapies for the individual patient, in which "omics" sciences lead to an integration of data that leads to highly predictive models of the functioning of the individual biological system. They enable rapid diagnosis, assessment of disease dynamics, identification of targeted treatment protocols, and reduction of costs and psychological stress. "Precision dentistry" (DP) is one promising application that need further investigation; the purpose of this paper is therefore to give physicians an overview of the knowledge they need to enhance treatment planning and patient response to therapy. A systematic literature review was conducted on the PubMed, Scopus, and Web of Science databases by analyzing the articles examining the role of precision medicine in dentistry. PM aims to shed light on cancer prevention strategies, by identifying risk factors, and on malformations such as orofacial cleft. Another application is pain management by repurposing drugs created for other diseases to target biochemical mechanisms. The significant heritability of traits regulating bacterial colonization and local inflammatory responses is another result of genomic research, and is useful for DP in the field of caries and periodontitis. This approach may also be useful in the field of orthodontics and regenerative dentistry. The possibility of creating an international network of databases will lead to the diagnosis, prediction, and prevention of disease outbreaks, providing significant economic savings for the world's health care systems.
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These authors contributed equally to this work as last authors.
These authors contributed equally to this work as first authors.
ISSN:2075-4426
2075-4426
DOI:10.3390/jpm13050725