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Fluctuations of MS births and UV-light exposure

journal contribution
posted on 2013-05-01, 00:00 authored by F Verheul, J Smolders, M Trojano, V Lepore, C Zwanikken, M P Amato, F Grand'maison, H Butzkueven, M Marrosu, P Duquette, G Comi, G Izquierdo, P Grammond, G Lus, T Petersen, R Bergamaschi, G Giuliani, C Boz, M Barnett, Cameron ShawCameron Shaw
BACKGROUND: Patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) are more frequently born in spring when compared to autumn. Fluctuation of UV-light has been hypothesized to drive this phenomenon. AIM: To assess the correlation between fluctuation of sunlight and birth season in persons with MS. METHODS: For this record-linkage study, we collected from the international MSBase and the Italian MS iMed-web databases the dates of birth of 11,415 patients with MS from 36 centres from 15 countries worldwide and compared these to dates of live-births from national registries. From all participating sites, we collected data on UV-light fluctuation and assessed its correlation with seasonal fluctuation in MS births. RESULTS: Compared with the reference cohort, an increased proportion of persons with MS were born in spring and a decreased proportion in autumn (odds ratio (OR) to be born in spring versus autumn = 1.158, χ² = 36.347, P < 0.001). There was no significantly increased fluctuation of MS births with increased quartile of ambient UV-light fluctuation (Ptrend = 0.086). CONCLUSION: Seasonal fluctuation of MS births as found in this worldwide cohort of patients with MS did not correlate with variation in seasonal fluctuation of UV-light. Most likely, it results from a complex interplay between fluctuation of sunlight, behavioural factors, other environmental factors and (epi)genetic factors.

History

Journal

Acta neurologica scandinavica

Volume

127

Issue

5

Pagination

301 - 308

Publisher

Wiley

Location

London, Eng.

ISSN

0001-6314

eISSN

1600-0404

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article; C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2012, John Wiley & Sons