Skip to Main Content
Text size: SmallMediumLargeExtra-Large

NIDCR Director's Statement for House and Senate Appropriations Committees Regarding the FY 2006 Budget Request

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Committee:

I am pleased to present the President’s budget request for the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research (NIDCR) for Fiscal Year (FY) 2006.  The FY 2006 budget includes $393,269,000, an increase of $1,440,000 over the FY 2005 level of $391,829,000 comparable for transfers proposed in the President’s Request.

THE ROAD AHEAD: MERGING SCIENTIFIC VISION AND TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT 

Many of the opportunities that now face our nation’s oral health researchers have never been more exciting or scientifically challenging.  For the first time, we can envision a day when early stage tooth decay will be reversible with remineralizing solutions that patch the tooth and halt the disease process before a filling is required.  Researchers will soon begin to learn how to engineer teeth and their constituent parts in the laboratory and transplant them into the mouth to replace a missing tooth or damaged tissue.  The day also is approaching when saliva will be a reliable diagnostic fluid to detect systemic diseases, providing a rapid, non-invasive alternative to blood-based tests.  These are but a few of the many opportunities that await us.  And yet, as important as these visions of the future are in setting the course toward improved public health, it is abundantly clear that the road ahead will be blocked unless we develop new tools and technologies for working within the complex microenvironments of the human body.  It is this merging of scientific vision with technology development that the NIDCR is fostering within our nation’s oral research community and which I would like to highlight.

EARLY DIAGNOSIS TO PREVENT DENTAL CARIES

 

Let me begin with one of the examples just mentioned.  Despite dramatic reductions in tooth decay in the United States over the last half century, dental caries remains a significant public health problem, particularly among disadvantaged population groups.  Dental decay also is an unexpected impediment to timely deployment of military personnel.  At a time when our nation remains at war, dental readiness has been cited in testimony by the Reserve Officers Association as the number one deployment problem for National Guard and Reserve members.  In a 2002 Department of Defense study, 34 percent of military personnel required dental care before they could be deployed, compared to only 16 percent in 1998. 

The NIDCR will soon launch an initiative to evaluate the ability of emerging technologies to accurately and reproducibly measure extremely subtle changes in dental enamel that signal the earliest phases of dental caries.  While this initiative may sound highly technical, its outcome could play an essential role in transforming dental care.  Treatments with the potential to remineralize tooth surfaces in the very earliest stages of decay, long before a filling is needed, are emerging.  In anticipation of the required clinical trials to rigorously evaluate these treatments, NIDCR will soon launch an initiative to ensure that microscopic changes in a tooth’s mineral content can be measured accurately and reproducibly.  Through this enabling research, the evaluation of these treatments will be firmly grounded in science, ensuring the greatest possible benefit to the public.    

BIOENGINEERING:  BUILDING A TOOTH

Tooth loss has been a public health problem in the United States since the days of George Washington and Thomas Jefferson.  Despite revolutionary advances in oral health over the last half century, tooth loss remains a problem, particularly among disadvantaged groups.  In addition, tooth agenesis - the lack of one or more permanent teeth - is the most common congenital malformation in humans.  While dental implants or dentures are often effective replacements, science has progressed to the point that it may be possible to generate replacement teeth from scratch, which would mark a truly historic advance in oral healthcare and in our understanding of human biology.

Whereas just a few years ago tooth regeneration was far beyond the reach of science, which is no longer the case.  An historic opportunity now awaits dental science to learn to seed and reproducibly control the complex, tightly orchestrated cellular and molecular interactions involved in producing a tooth and its supporting structures.  The crucial first steps will be to:  identify existing gaps in our knowledge of tooth formation; pursue viable solutions from throughout the biological and physical sciences to bridge these gaps; and, based on these comprehensive analyses, formulate blueprints for a complete tooth.  Relying on the best of these blueprints, interdisciplinary teams of scientists will begin the process of engineering replacement teeth.  It is likely that these investigations will initially yield viable replacement parts, such as enamel, dentin or periodontal ligament, but the ultimate goal is complete tooth regeneration. 

LAB ON A CHIP:  SALIVARY DIAGNOSTICS

Another particularly exciting area of research is salivary diagnostics.  Scientists have long recognized that our saliva serves as a “mirror” of the body’s health, in that it contains the full repertoire of proteins, hormones, antibodies, and other molecular substances that are frequently measured in standard blood tests to monitor health and disease.  Saliva is easy to collect and poses none of the risks, fears, or “invasiveness” of blood tests.  The problem has been that the needed technologies have not existed to adequately develop salivary diagnostics on a large scale.

The Institute continues to support a major research effort that will further develop these needed technologies and create the first comprehensive baseline catalogue of all proteins found normally in oral fluids.  This is the initial step in building the needed scientific infrastructure required to expand salivary diagnostics.  Already, scientists have begun to evaluate which of the myriad gene products in saliva correlate with various disease processes.
 

The NIDCR envisions that this basic research could one day translate into miniature, hi-tech tests, or so-called “labs” on a silicon chip, which rapidly scan oral fluids for the presence or absence of multiple proteins linked to various systemic diseases and conditions.  Given the ease of sample collection and the breadth of protein markers that could be arrayed on the silicon chip, salivary tests have the potential to revolutionize how diseases are diagnosed.  Physicians and dentists would continue to diagnose diseases.  But they would be in the position for the first time to monitor a patient’s health, producing a comprehensive molecular printout of that individual’s health status that can be assessed over time.

Salivary diagnostics will have benefits far beyond medicine and dentistry as well.  Law enforcement agencies could employ saliva tests in the field to determine rapidly whether a person is intoxicated or has recently used illegal drugs.   These tests may also be beneficial in determining exposures to environmental, occupational, and biological substances, such as anthrax. 


ORAL CANCER:  EARLY DETECTION IS KEY TO SAVING LIVES

The field of salivary diagnostics recently yielded exciting early findings related to oral cancer detection.  According to the American Cancer Society and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, oral cancer is the seventh most common cancer among U.S. males and ranks fourth among African American men.  Unfortunately, survival rates have not improved significantly in decades.  A patient’s chance of survival is improved significantly with early detection and treatment.  A team of NIDCR-supported scientists at the University of California at Los Angeles recently reported that they could measure elevated levels of four distinct cancer-associated molecules in saliva and distinguish within 91 percent accuracy between healthy people and those diagnosed with oral squamous cell carcinoma.  This “proof-of-principle” study marks the first report in the scientific literature that distinct patterns of “messenger RNA” are not only measurable in saliva, but can indicate a developing tumor.  These initial results highlight the potential clinical value of saliva and hold out exciting possibilities for development of commercially available tests capable of delivering early, reliable, non-invasive detection of developing tumors.

PAIN:   TRANSLATING TARGETS INTO TREATMENTS

Sizeable gaps exist in our understanding of some of the most basic cells involved in the pain process.  Prime examples are the glial cells.  For decades, scientists assumed that glial cells primarily played a supportive role in the central nervous system and had no direct influence on the transmission of sensory signals to the brain.  But, as more powerful analytical molecular tools have emerged in recent years, scientists now realize that glial cells play a far more important role in pain than was previously appreciated.  With this new awareness, it becomes imperative to better define the biology of these cells and their roles in regulating certain aspects of nervous system function.

  

The NIDCR will launch an initiative that will stimulate needed research into the basic biology of glial cells and their interactions with neurons in causing orofacial pain disorders, such as temporomandibular joint disorders.  The initiative will encourage multidisciplinary studies in a variety of areas to define more broadly than ever important aspects of the pain process.  Based on this broad investigative approach, key aspects of the pain process will be more clearly defined, pointing the way to unique and highly specific molecular targets for drug development.   Without identifying these additional targets, it will be impossible to ever adequately control or treat pain, particularly among the estimated 10 percent of Americans who suffer from chronic pain. 

 

NIH ROADMAP

 

The NIH Roadmap themes are synergistic with NIDCR research initiatives and provide added impetus to the efforts of oral health researchers.  For example, the theme Re-engineering the Clinical Research Enterprise is particularly relevant to the development of NIDCR-sponsored dental Practice Based Research Networks.  Similarly, the goals of the initiative Building Blocks, Biological Pathways and Networks are closely linked to NIDCR’s own bioengineering initiative, “Building a Tooth.”  Research Teams of the Future provides an opportunity to further integrate dentists into the new clinical research structure, and highlights NIDCR’s longstanding efforts to encourage multi- and interdisciplinary approaches to research questions. 

With the above-mentioned examples and other research progress, such as in salivary gene transfer, defining the oral biofilm, and the molecular targeting of oral cancer, NIDCR has never faced more exciting opportunities.  By merging our vision of the future with technology development, the road ahead will lead this nation to a new generation of progress and improved oral health. 

Thank you, Mr. Chairman.  I would be pleased to answer any questions that the Committee may have.

This page last updated: December 20, 2008