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Latitudinal variation in incidence and type of first central nervous system demyelinating events

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-17, 03:57 authored by Bruce TaylorBruce Taylor, Lucas, RM, Dear, K, Kilpatrick, TJ, Pender, MP, Ingrid van der MeiIngrid van der Mei, Chapman, C, Coulthard, A, Dwyer, T, McMichael, AJ, Valery, PC, Williams, D, Ponsonby, AL
Increasing prevalence and variable geographic patterns of occurrence of multiple sclerosis suggest an environmental role in causation. There are few descriptive, population-level, data on whether such variability applies to first demyelinating events (FDEs). We recruited 216 adults (18—59 years), with a FDE between 1 November 2003 and 31 December 2006 in a multi-center incident case-control study in four locations on the south-eastern and eastern seaboard of Australia, spanning latitudes 27° south to 43° south. Population denominators were obtained from the Australian Bureau of Statistics censuses of 2001 and 2006. Age and sex adjusted FDE incidence rates increased by 9.55% (95% confidence interval (CI) 7.37—11.78, p < 0.001) per higher degree of latitude. The incidence rate gradient per higher degree of latitude varied by gender (male: 14.69% (95% CI 9.68—19.94, p < 0.001); female 8.13% (95% CI 5.69—10.62, p < 0.001)); and also by the presenting FDE type: optic neuritis 11.39% (95% CI 7.15—15.80, p < 0.001); brainstem/cerebellar syndrome 9.47% (95% CI 5.18—13.93, p < 0.001); and spinal cord syndrome 5.36% (95% CI 1.78—9.06, p = 0.003). Differences in incidence rate gradients were statistically significant between males and females (p = 0.02) and between optic neuritis and spinal cord syndrome (p = 0.04). The male to female ratio varied from 1 : 6.7 at 27° south to 1 : 2.5 at 43° south. The study establishes a positive latitudinal gradient of FDE incidence in Australia. The latitude-related factor(s) influences FDE incidence variably according to subtype and gender, with the strongest influence on optic neuritis presentations and for males. These descriptive case analyses show intriguing patterns that could be important for understanding the etiology of multiple sclerosis.

History

Publication title

Multiple Sclerosis

Volume

16

Issue

4

Pagination

398-405

ISSN

1352-4585

Department/School

Menzies Institute for Medical Research

Publisher

Arnold

Place of publication

Hodder Headline Plc, 338 Euston Road, London, England, Nw1 3Bh

Rights statement

Copyright © 2010, SAGE Publications.

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Preventive medicine

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