Assessing interactions between HLA-DRB1*15 and infectious mononucleosis on the risk of multiple sclerosis
journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-17, 19:15authored byDisanto, G, C Hall, Lucas, R, Ponsonby, A-L, Berlanga-Taylor, AJ, Giovannoni, G, Ramagopalan, SV, Chapman, C, Coulthard, A, Dear, K, Dwyer, T, Kilpatrick, T, McMichael, T, Pender, MP, Bruce TaylorBruce Taylor, Valery, P, Ingrid van der MeiIngrid van der Mei, Williams, D
Gene-environment interactions may shed light on the mechanisms underlying multiple sclerosis (MS). We pooled data from two case-control studies on incident demyelination and used different methods to assess interaction between HLA-DRB1*15 (DRB1-15) and history of infectious mononucleosis (IM). Individuals exposed to both factors were at substantially increased risk of disease (OR=7.32, 95% CI=4.92-10.90). In logistic regression models, DRB1-15 and IM status were independent predictors of disease while their interaction term was not (DRB1-15*IM: OR=1.35, 95% CI=0.79-2.23). However, interaction on an additive scale was evident (Synergy index=2.09, 95% CI=1.59-2.59; excess risk due to interaction=3.30, 95%CI=0.47-6.12; attributable proportion due to interaction=45%, 95% CI=22-68%). This suggests, if the additive model is appropriate, the DRB1-15 and IM may be involved in the same causal process leading to MS and highlights the benefit of reporting gene-environment interactions on both a multiplicative and additive scale.