| Literature DB >> 29159463 |
Olöf Eliasdottir1, Anders Hildeman2, Marco Longfils2, O Nerman2, J Lycke3.
Abstract
Previous studies have shown that the risk of multiple sclerosis (MS) is associated with season of birth with a higher proportion of MS patients being born in spring. However, this relationship has recently been questioned and may be due to confounding factors. Our aim was to assess the influence from season or month of birth on the risk of developing MS in Sweden and Iceland. Information about month of birth, gender, and phenotype of MS for patients born 1940-1996 was retrieved from the Swedish MS registry (SMSR), and their place of birth was retrieved from the Swedish Total Population Registry (TPR). The corresponding information was retrieved from medical journals of Icelandic MS patients born 1981-1996. The control groups consisted of every person born in Sweden 1940-1996, their gender and county of birth (TPR), and in Iceland all persons born between 1981 and 1996 and their gender (Statistics Iceland). We calculated the expected number of MS patients born during each season and in every month and compared it with the observed number. Adjustments were made for gender, birth year, and county of birth. We included 12,020 Swedish and 108 Icelandic MS patients in the analyses. There was no significant difference between expected and observed MS births related to season or month of birth in Sweden or Iceland. This was even the results before adjustments were made for birth year and birth place. No significant differences were found in subgroup analyses including data of latitude of birth, gender, clinical phenotype, and MS onset of 30 years or less. Our results do not support the previously reported association between season or month of birth and MS risk. Analysis of birth place and birth year as possible confounding factors showed no major influence of them on the seasonal MS risk in Sweden and Iceland.Entities:
Keywords: Epidemiology; Iceland; Month of birth; Multiple sclerosis; Risk factors; Sweden
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29159463 PMCID: PMC5760596 DOI: 10.1007/s00415-017-8665-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol ISSN: 0340-5354 Impact factor: 4.849
Fig. 1Seasonality of MS births in Sweden, with adjustments for gender, year of birth, and county of birth
Owerview over studies of birth month and MS risk
| Country | Author | Publication year | Birth years of MS group | Included patients (n) | Controls | Main findings | Adjustment for birth year/birthplace |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Canada, Great Britain, Denmark, Sweden [ | Willer et al. | 2005 | 1926–1970 (Canada) | 17,874, 11,502, 6276, 6393 (total 42,045) | 13,675,451 (Canada) | 9.1% more in May, 8.5% fewer in November | No/no |
| Sweden [ | Salzer J et al. | 2010 | 1900–2007 | 9361 | 12,116,853 | 11% more in June, 8 and 10% fewer in December and January | No/no |
| Italy [ | Sotgiu et al. | 2006 | nda | 810 | 247,612 | More births in spring months | No/no |
| Scotland [ | Bayes et al. | 2010 | 1922–1992 | 1309 | 6,198,352 | 17% more in spring, 13% fewer in autumn | No/yes |
| Australia [ | Staples et al. | 2010 | 1920–1950 | 1524 | 2,468,779 | 1.34 risk for those born in November–December compared May–Juneb | No/yes |
| Kuwait [ | Akhtar et al. | 2015 | 1950–2013 | 1035 | 3,454,222 | 13% more in December | No/yes |
| Portugal [ | Barros et al. | 2013 | 1992–1943 | 421 | 1,150,362 | No seasonal difference | No/yes |
| Norway [ | Torkildsen et al. | 2014 | 1930–1979 | 6649 | 2,899,260 | No seasonal difference | Yes/yes |
| Finland [ | Saastamoinen et al. | 2012 | 1900–1988 | 8739 | 7,014,435 | 9.4% more in April, 11.1% fewer in November | Yes/no |
| South America [ | Fragoso et al. | 2013 | nda | 1207 | 1207 | No seasonal difference | Yes/yes |
aNot defined
bIncidence rate ratio for two-month period with May–June as the reference period (1.0)