Background: Cleft lip and palate may promote early oral Candida colonization and caries. This study compared Candida carriage and oral health indices in 0-3-year-old children with trans-foramen cleft lip and palate versus age- and sex-matched controls. Methods: In this observational study, 40 cleft and 40 control children were enrolled. Multi-site oral swabs were cultured with speciation (germ tube test for Candida albicans and CHROMagar for non-albicans Candida); fungal burden was reported as colony-forming units per mL. The def index and caries severity index (CSI) were analyzed using the chi-square test, independent t-tests, and Mann-Whitney U test. Results: Candida carriage was higher in cleft children than controls (35 (87.5%) vs 8 (20.0%)), and growth categories differed (p0.05). def was higher in the cleft group (5.62±0.35 vs 4.83±0.45; mean difference 0.79; p<0.001). The CSI was higher (2.79±0.33 vs 1.92±0.28; mean difference 0.87; p<0.001). Ordinal growth ranks favored the cleft cohort (mean rank 53.83 vs 27.18; p<0.001). Conclusions: Early childhood cleft lip and palate was associated with substantially higher asymptomatic Candida colonization and worse caries-related indices, supporting cleft-adapted hygiene counseling and preventive dental surveillance rather than empiric antifungal therapy in asymptomatic children.
Sravani et al. (Wed,) studied this question.