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Seasonal variation of relapse rate in multiple sclerosis is latitude dependent

journal contribution
posted on 2014-12-01, 00:00 authored by T Spelman, O Gray, M Trojano, T Petersen, G Izquierdo, A Lugaresi, R Hupperts, R Bergamaschi, P Duquette, P Grammond, G Giuliani, C Boz, F Verheul, C Oreja-Guevara, M Barnett, F Grand'Maison, M Edite Rio, J Lechner-Scott, V Van Pesch, Cameron ShawCameron Shaw
OBJECTIVE: Previous studies assessing seasonal variation of relapse onset in multiple sclerosis have had conflicting results. Small relapse numbers, differing diagnostic criteria, and single region studies limit the generalizability of prior results. The aim of this study was to determine whether there is a temporal variation in onset of relapses in both hemispheres and to determine whether seasonal peak relapse probability varies with latitude. METHODS: The international MSBase Registry was utilized to analyze seasonal relapse onset distribution by hemisphere and latitudinal location. All analyses were weighted for the patient number contributed by each center. A sine regression model was used to model relapse onset and ultraviolet radiation (UVR) seasonality. Linear regression was used to investigate associations of latitude and lag between UVR trough and subsequent relapse peak. RESULTS: A total of 32,762 relapses from 9,811 patients across 30 countries were analyzed. Relapse onset followed an annual cyclical sinusoidal pattern with peaks in early spring and troughs in autumn in both hemispheres. Every 10° of latitude away from the equator was associated with a mean decrease in UVR trough to subsequent relapse peak lag of 28.5 days (95% confidence interval = 3.29-53.71, p = 0.028). INTERPRETATION: We demonstrate for the first time that there is a latitude-dependent relationship between seasonal UVR trough and relapse onset probability peak independent of location-specific UVR levels, with more distal latitude associated with shorter gaps. We confirm prior meta-analyses showing a strong seasonal relapse onset probability variation in the northern hemisphere, and extend this observation to the southern hemisphere.

History

Journal

Annals of neurology

Volume

76

Issue

6

Pagination

880 - 890

Publisher

Wiley

Location

London, Eng.

eISSN

1531-8249

Language

eng

Publication classification

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

Copyright notice

2014, American Neurological Association