@article{103430, keywords = {Oral Health, leprosy}, author = {Chung AT and Marquez MLU and Baghban GS and Bati ATD and Lachica MRCT and Amoranto MBC and Cruz MKDM and Dalmacio LMM and Cubillan ELA and Dofitas BL}, title = {The oral health status of Filipinos affected by leprosy in a Philippine tertiary care center}, abstract = {

Objective

To assess and compare the oral health status of patients with and without leprosy consulting at a tertiary care center in the Philippines.

Methods

This cross-sectional exploratory study included 45 adult leprosy patients and 105 age- and sex-matched controls seen at a tertiary hospital in Manila, Philippines. Structured interviews and dental exams were conducted to assess decayed, missing, and lled permanent teeth (DMFT), bleeding on probing (BOP), periodontal probing depth (PPD), and clinical attachment loss (CAL). Dental treatment needs were also recorded.

Results

Leprosy patients had higher CAL (mean 3.14), more decayed teeth, fewer lled teeth, and were more likely to need extraction/endodontic treatment and restoration (p< 0.05) than controls. Advanced periodontitis (stage III/IV) was observed in 73% of leprosy patients, predominantly in those with lepromatous leprosy (n= 31).

Conclusion

Leprosy patients exhibited poorer oral health and greater unmet treatment needs compared with controls. These findings underscore persistent oral health disparities and support the integration of routine oral health screening and timely referral to dental services into leprosy management.

}, year = {2026}, journal = {Leprosy Review}, volume = {97}, pages = {1-11}, month = {03/2026}, publisher = {Lepra}, issn = {2162-8807}, url = {https://www.researchgate.net/publication/401653149_The_oral_health_status_of_Filipinos_affected_by_leprosy_in_a_Philippine_tertiary_care_center}, doi = {10.47276/lr.97.1.2025117}, language = {ENG}, }