Oral microbiome diversity and all-cause mortality in hypertensive adults: findings from a nationally representative cohort
Zhe Zhou, Zichao Zhuang, Yipeng Ding, Yufan Jiang, Shu Chen, Qinglian Zhang, Hanxin Que, Jian Lin, Hui Deng, Yi Wang

TL;DR
Higher oral microbiome diversity is linked to lower all-cause mortality in people with hypertension, with possible differences between men and women.
Contribution
This study identifies oral microbiome diversity as a protective factor against mortality in hypertensive individuals.
Findings
Higher oral microbiome diversity was associated with reduced all-cause mortality risk.
The Simpson and Shannon–Weiner diversity indices showed significant protective effects.
Sex may influence the relationship between oral microbiome diversity and mortality risk.
Abstract
Oral microbiome diversity has been associated with general health. However, its association with long-term outcomes in hypertensive individuals remains unclear. This study aimed to investigate whether oral microbiome diversity is associated with all-cause mortality in hypertensive individuals. Data from 2,669 hypertensive individuals in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES, 2009–2012) were analyzed. Oral microbiome diversity was assessed using four alpha-diversity metrics: the Simpson index, Shannon–Weiner index, Faith’s Phylogenetic Diversity, and observed amplicon sequence variants (ASVs). Weighted multivariable Cox proportional hazards regression and interaction analyses were conducted. During a mean follow-up of 8.61 years, 268 all-cause deaths occurred. Higher oral microbiome diversity assessed by the Simpson index (hazard ratio [HR] = 0.38; 95%…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOral microbiology and periodontitis research · Gut microbiota and health · Dental Health and Care Utilization
