Genetics
Genetic Liability and Early-Life Exposures Shape the Timing of Multiple Sclerosis Diagnosis: Evidence From a UK Biobank Survival Analysis04, Mar 2026
Alper Bülbül
04, Mar 2026
This post examines a UK Biobank study by Nova et al. that shifts MS epidemiology from retrospective case–control comparisons to a time-to-event framework, modeling how genetic susceptibility and early-life exposures influence when MS is diagnosed across the life course. Using inverse-probability–weighted Cox models with time-varying exposures, the study shows that sex and polygenic risk have age-dependent effects—stronger in younger adults—while smoking, infectious mononucleosis, and higher genetic propensity to elevated BMI increase the hazard of MS diagnosis. It further reports additive gene–environment interactions (notably between polygenic risk and smoking/IM), illustrating how combined exposures stratify projected cumulative incidence, and discusses implications for age-specific risk prediction and prevention while noting key limitations such as using diagnosis date as a proxy for onset and restricted ancestry generalizability.
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