Population attributable fractions and joint effects of key risk factors for multiple sclerosis

Author:

van der Mei IAF1,Lucas RM2,Taylor BV1,Valery PC3,Dwyer T4,Kilpatrick TJ5,Pender MP6,Williams D6,Chapman C7,Otahal P1,Ponsonby A-L8

Affiliation:

1. Menzies Research Institute, Australia

2. National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health, The Australian National University, Australia

3. Queensland Institute of Medical Research, Australia

4. International Agency for Research on Cancer, France

5. Centre for Neuroscience, The University of Melbourne, Australia

6. Department of Neurophysiology, John Hunter Hospital, Australia

7. Department of Neurology, Barwon Health, Australia

8. Murdoch Childrens Research Institute, Australia

Abstract

Aim: We examined the combined effect of having multiple key risk factors and the interactions between the key risk factors of multiple sclerosis (MS). Methods: We performed an incident case-control study including cases with a first clinical diagnosis of central nervous system demyelination (FCD) and population-based controls. Results: Compared to those without any risk factors, those with one, two, three, and four or five risk factors had increased odds of being an FCD case of 2.12 (95% confidence interval (CI), 1.11–4.03), 4.31 (95% CI, 2.24–8.31), 7.96 (95% CI, 3.84–16.49), and 21.24 (95% CI, 5.48–82.40), respectively. Only HLA-DR15 and history of infectious mononucleosis interacted significantly on the additive scale (Synergy index, 3.78; p = 0.03). The five key risk factors jointly accounted for 63.8% (95% CI, 43.9–91.4) of FCD onset. High anti-EBNA IgG was another important contributor. Conclusions: A high proportion of FCD onset can be explained by the currently known risk factors, with HLA-DR15, ever smoking and low cumulative sun exposure explaining most. We identified a significant interaction between HLA-DR15 and history of IM in predicting an FCD of CNS demyelination, which together with previous observations suggests that this is a true interaction.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Clinical Neurology,Neurology

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