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Genetic and Environmental Determinants of Multiple Sclerosis: Insights from a UK Biobank Longitudinal Study
Genetic and Environmental Determinants of Multiple Sclerosis: Insights from a UK Biobank Longitudinal Study

This blog post explores a recent large-scale longitudinal study that redefines our understanding of multiple sclerosis (MS) risk by incorporating a time-to-event analytical framework. Leveraging UK Biobank data, the research demonstrates that genetic susceptibility—captured through polygenic risk scores—and environmental exposures such as smoking and Epstein–Barr virus infection exert dynamic, age-dependent effects on disease onset. Notably, the findings reveal that both genetic risk and female sex have a stronger influence in early adulthood, challenging traditional retrospective models that assume constant lifetime risk. By integrating interaction effects and cumulative incidence modeling, the study provides a more precise and temporally resolved perspective on MS pathogenesis, with important implications for early detection and personalized risk stratification.

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