Selective association of multiple sclerosis with infectious mononucleosis
- 1 April 2008
- journal article
- other
- Published by SAGE Publications in Multiple Sclerosis Journal
- Vol. 14 (3) , 307-313
- https://doi.org/10.1177/1352458507084265
Abstract
Previous studies have suggested an association between multiple sclerosis (MS) and infectious mononucleosis (IM) but data on the exact strength of this association or its selectivity have been conflicting. In this study we have evaluated the association between MS and a variety of common childhood infections and afflictions in a large population-based case-control study involving 2877 MS cases and 2673 controls in the Netherlands. We examined the frequency of different common infections and afflictions before the age of 25 and the age at which they occurred, using a self-administered questionnaire. The Odds ratios (ORs) for the occurrence of a variety of clinically manifest common childhood infections including rubella, measles, chicken pox and mumps before the age of 25 for MS cases versus controls ranged between 1.14 and 1.42, values similar to those for irrelevant probe variables used to reveal recall bias. In contrast, the OR for clinically manifest IM in MS cases versus controls, corrected for demographic variables, was 2.22 (95% confidence interval 1.73 — 2.86; P < 0.001). The average age of onset of IM in the population of MS cases (16.5 years) did not differ from controls (16.8 years). Our data confirm previous much smaller studies to show that the risk for MS is significantly enhanced by prior IM, and extend those previous data by showing that this association is far stronger than with other common childhood infections or afflictions. Multiple scelerosis 2008; 14: 307—313. http://msj.sagepub.comKeywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Increased frequency and broadened specificity of latent EBV nuclear antigen-1-specific T cells in multiple sclerosisBrain, 2006
- Infectious mononucleosis and risk for multiple sclerosis: A meta‐analysisAnnals of Neurology, 2006
- Childhood Infections as Risk Factors for Multiple Sclerosis: Belgrade Case-Control StudyNeuroepidemiology, 2004
- Childhood infections and risk of multiple sclerosisBrain, 2004
- Multiple sclerosis and tonsillectomy: no evidence for an influence on the development of disease or clinical phenotypeMultiple Sclerosis Journal, 2000
- Identification of High Potency Microbial and Self Ligands for a Human Autoreactive Class II–restricted T Cell CloneThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1997
- The implications of Epstein-Barr virus in multiple‘ sclerosis - a reviewActa Neurologica Scandinavica, 1997
- The small heat-shock protein αB-crystallin as candidate autoantigen in multiple sclerosisNature, 1995
- Molecular mimicry in T cell-mediated autoimmunity: Viral peptides activate human T cell clones specific for myelin basic proteinCell, 1995
- Absence of Epstein-Barr virus RNA in multiple sclerosis as assessed by in situ hybridisation.Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry, 1994