Oral health research provides evidence for policy and practice, yet no study has comprehensively mapped the scope of oral health research in Malaysia. The COVID-19 pandemic has also created a great impact on oral healthcare in Malaysia, including the dental care delivery. Additionally, there is a notable lack of research focusing on oral health during and after the COVID-19 pandemic. Therefore, this scoping review will aim to map the landscape of oral health research conducted in Malaysia and identify key topics, study designs, populations studied and gaps in the literature, in order to inform future research priorities and policy, particularly in the post-COVID-19 era.
The methodology draws on Arksey and O’Malleys’ seminal framework for the scoping review and will be reported in accordance with Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses for Scoping Review (PRISMA-ScR) guidelines. We will search five major electronic databases—PubMed, Scopus, ProQuest, Cochrane and Web of Science—as well as selected grey literature sources (eg, theses, dissertations and conference proceedings) for studies published in English from January 2014 to December 2024. Studies of any design related to oral health in Malaysia will be included. Two reviewers will be performing title and abstract screening, in which they will be working independently. The included publication will undergo a full-text review, and references cited in these studies will be examined following the inclusion criteria. The PRISMA-ScR flow diagram will be used as a guide throughout the process. Data will be extracted, analysed and charted according to key categories identified in the included publications. A narrative synthesis and descriptive statistics will be presented.
The results of this scoping review will illustrate an overview and provide a better understanding regarding the oral health research in the Malaysian context; whether research has already been conducted, is currently ongoing and is still needed; and which areas should be prioritised for future investigation. As this review will use publicly available literature, formal ethics approval will not be required. The findings will be submitted for publication in an open-access peer-reviewed journal, presented at national and regional conferences and shared with Malaysian dental professional bodies and relevant stakeholders.
The protocol of this scoping review is registered with the Open Science Framework and is available at osf.io/hjq6m.
The Cardiometabolic function in Offspring, Mother and Placenta after Assisted Reproductive Technology (COMPART) study is a prospective cohort study aiming to explore health outcomes in mothers and children following assisted reproductive technology (ART), with a particular focus on frozen embryo transfer (FET) versus fresh embryo transfer (fresh-ET). The increasing prevalence of ART and FET emphasises the need to assess potential health risks associated with the procedures, both in pregnancy, such as pre-eclampsia and large for gestational age offspring, and in the children, such as obesity and cardiometabolic dysfunction.
The cohort will include 600 pregnant women, their potential partner and their offspring in a 1:1:1 ratio of pregnancies achieved after ART with FET, ART with fresh-ET and women who conceived naturally. The study will involve extensive data collection from electronic medical records; parental questionnaires; biochemical, genetic and epigenetic analyses in blood, urine and placental tissue; and medical imaging (fetal ultrasound and PEA POD scan) and clinical examinations. Outcomes are grouped into six work packages (WPs) related to fetal growth (WP1), pregnancy (WP2), placenta (WP3), offspring (WP4), genetics (WP5) and epigenetics (WP6).
The COMPART study aims to provide valuable insights into the impact of ART and FET on maternal and offspring health and the underlying mechanisms responsible. The study seeks to advance reproductive medicine, shape clinical practice and guidelines and ultimately ensure maternal-fetal health following ART. The study has been approved by the Danish Ethics Committee (H-23071266; February 2024).