Summary of findings from the OPPERA prospective cohort study of incidence of first-onset temporomandibular disorder: implications and future directions

Gary D Slade, Roger B Fillingim, Anne E Sanders, Eric Bair, Joel D Greenspan, Richard Ohrbach, Ronald Dubner, Luda Diatchenko, Shad B Smith, Charles Knott, William Maixner, Gary D Slade, Roger B Fillingim, Anne E Sanders, Eric Bair, Joel D Greenspan, Richard Ohrbach, Ronald Dubner, Luda Diatchenko, Shad B Smith, Charles Knott, William Maixner

Abstract

Papers in this issue investigate when and how putative risk factors influence development of first-onset, painful temporomandibular disorder (TMD). The results represent first findings from the Orofacial Pain: Prospective Evaluation and Risk Assessment (OPPERA) prospective cohort study that monitored 2,737 men and women aged 18 to 44 years recruited at 4 U.S. study sites. During a median 2.8-year follow-up period, 260 participants developed TMD. The average incidence rate of 4% per annum was influenced by a broad range of phenotypic risk factors including sociodemographic characteristics, health status, clinical orofacial factors, psychological functioning, pain sensitivity, and cardiac autonomic responses. A novel method of multivariable analysis used random forest models to simultaneously evaluate contributions of all 202 phenotypic variables. Variables from the health status domain made the greatest contribution to TMD incidence, followed closely by psychological and clinical orofacial domains. However, only a few measures of pain sensitivity and autonomic function contributed to TMD incidence, and their effects were modest. Meanwhile, age and study site were independent predictors of TMD incidence, even after controlling for other phenotypes. Separate analysis of 358 genes that regulate pain found several novel genetic associations with intermediate phenotypes that, themselves, are risk factors for TMD, suggesting new avenues to investigate biological pathways contributing to TMD.

Perspective: Collectively, the papers in this issue demonstrate that TMD is a complex disorder with multiple causes consistent with a biopsychosocial model of illness. It is a misnomer and no longer appropriate to regard TMD solely as a localized orofacial pain condition.

Keywords: Temporomandibular disorder; clinical pain; cohort studies; comordid conditions; epidemiology; genetics; pain sensitivity; psychological factors.

Copyright © 2013 American Pain Society. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
This model displays two principal intermediate phenotypes (psychological distress and pain amplification) that contribute to onset and persistence of TMD. Each intermediate phenotype represents a constellation of more specific risk factors, all of which are subject to genetic regulation. Interactions between intermediate phenotypes take place in the presence of environmental contributions that further contribute to onset and persistence of painful TMD. Time is not shown in the model, because its effects occur implicitly on a third dimension that is not readily shown in the diagram. Reproduced with permission from Maixner W, et al, 2011.

Source: PubMed

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