TY - JOUR
T1 - Examining the environmental risk factors of progressive-onset and relapsing-onset multiple sclerosis
T2 - recruitment challenges, potential bias, and statistical strategies
AU - Li, Ying
AU - Saul, Alice
AU - Taylor, Bruce
AU - Ponsonby, Anne Louise
AU - Simpson-Yap, Steve
AU - Blizzard, Leigh
AU - Broadley, Simon
AU - Lechner-Scott, Jeannette
AU - Karabudak, Rana
AU - Patti, Francesco
AU - Eichau, Sara
AU - Onofrj, Marco
AU - Ozakbas, Serkan
AU - Horakova, Dana
AU - Kubala Havrdova, Eva
AU - Grand’Maison, Francois
AU - Alroughani, Raed
AU - Gerlach, Oliver
AU - Amato, Maria Pia
AU - Altintas, Ayse
AU - Girard, Marc
AU - Duquette, Pierre
AU - Blanco, Yolanda
AU - Ramo-Tello, Cristina
AU - Laureys, Guy
AU - Kalincik, Tomas
AU - Khoury, Samia J.
AU - Shaygannejad, Vahid
AU - Etemadifar, Masoud
AU - Singhal, Bhim
AU - Mrabet, Saloua
AU - Foschi, Matteo
AU - Habek, Mario
AU - John, Nevin
AU - Hughes, Stella
AU - McCombe, Pamela
AU - Ampapa, Radek
AU - van der Walt, Anneke
AU - Butzkueven, Helmut
AU - de Gans, Koen
AU - McGuigan, Chris
AU - Oreja-Guevara, Celia
AU - Sa, Maria Jose
AU - Petersen, Thor
AU - Al-Harbi, Talal
AU - Sempere, Angel Perez
AU - Van Wijmeersch, Bart
AU - Grigoriadis, Nikolaos
AU - Prevost, Julie
AU - Gray, Orla
AU - Castillo-Triviño, Tamara
AU - Macdonell, Richard
AU - Lugaresi, Alessandra
AU - Sajedi, Seyed Aidin
AU - van der Mei, Ingrid
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2023.
PY - 2024/1
Y1 - 2024/1
N2 - It is unknown whether the currently known risk factors of multiple sclerosis reflect the etiology of progressive-onset multiple sclerosis (POMS) as observational studies rarely included analysis by type of onset. We designed a case–control study to examine associations between environmental factors and POMS and compared effect sizes to relapse-onset MS (ROMS), which will offer insights into the etiology of POMS and potentially contribute to prevention and intervention practice. This study utilizes data from the Primary Progressive Multiple Sclerosis (PPMS) Study and the Australian Multi-center Study of Environment and Immune Function (the AusImmune Study). This report outlines the conduct of the PPMS Study, whether the POMS sample is representative, and the planned analysis methods. The study includes 155 POMS, 204 ROMS, and 558 controls. The distributions of the POMS were largely similar to Australian POMS patients in the MSBase Study, with 54.8% female, 85.8% POMS born before 1970, mean age of onset of 41.44 ± 8.38 years old, and 67.1% living between 28.9 and 39.4° S. The POMS were representative of the Australian POMS population. There are some differences between POMS and ROMS/controls (mean age at interview: POMS 55 years vs. controls 40 years; sex: POMS 53% female vs. controls 78% female; location of residence: 14.3% of POMS at a latitude ≤ 28.9°S vs. 32.8% in controls), which will be taken into account in the analysis. We discuss the methodological issues considered in the study design, including prevalence-incidence bias, cohort effects, interview bias and recall bias, and present strategies to account for it. Associations between exposures of interest and POMS/ROMS will be presented in subsequent publications.
AB - It is unknown whether the currently known risk factors of multiple sclerosis reflect the etiology of progressive-onset multiple sclerosis (POMS) as observational studies rarely included analysis by type of onset. We designed a case–control study to examine associations between environmental factors and POMS and compared effect sizes to relapse-onset MS (ROMS), which will offer insights into the etiology of POMS and potentially contribute to prevention and intervention practice. This study utilizes data from the Primary Progressive Multiple Sclerosis (PPMS) Study and the Australian Multi-center Study of Environment and Immune Function (the AusImmune Study). This report outlines the conduct of the PPMS Study, whether the POMS sample is representative, and the planned analysis methods. The study includes 155 POMS, 204 ROMS, and 558 controls. The distributions of the POMS were largely similar to Australian POMS patients in the MSBase Study, with 54.8% female, 85.8% POMS born before 1970, mean age of onset of 41.44 ± 8.38 years old, and 67.1% living between 28.9 and 39.4° S. The POMS were representative of the Australian POMS population. There are some differences between POMS and ROMS/controls (mean age at interview: POMS 55 years vs. controls 40 years; sex: POMS 53% female vs. controls 78% female; location of residence: 14.3% of POMS at a latitude ≤ 28.9°S vs. 32.8% in controls), which will be taken into account in the analysis. We discuss the methodological issues considered in the study design, including prevalence-incidence bias, cohort effects, interview bias and recall bias, and present strategies to account for it. Associations between exposures of interest and POMS/ROMS will be presented in subsequent publications.
KW - Bias
KW - Case–control
KW - Environmental factors
KW - Progressive-onset multiple sclerosis
KW - Subject recruitment
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85181761016
U2 - 10.1007/s00415-023-11980-z
DO - 10.1007/s00415-023-11980-z
M3 - Article
C2 - 37768389
AN - SCOPUS:85181761016
SN - 0340-5354
VL - 271
SP - 472
EP - 485
JO - Journal of Neurology
JF - Journal of Neurology
IS - 1
ER -