Epidemiology Of Multiple Sclerosis In US Veterans:
VII. Risk Factors For MS

Kurtzke JF, Page WF
Neurology 1997 Jan 48:1 204-13
Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Neurology Service, Washington, DC 20422, USA

PMID# 9008519; UI# 97161262
Abstract

In previous papers of this series, we explored the Epidemiology of MS, examining the effects of race, sex, geography, latitude and climate, migration, age at onset, population ancestry, and individual Ethnicity on the risk of MS.

We used an unusually large cohort of MS cases and pre-illness matched controls comprising US Veterans of World War II (WWII) and the Korean Conflict (KC).

In this paper, we examine primarily the effect of other factors on the risk of MS in this cohort and their relation to those previously studied.

We found here that latitude tier of residence at Entry into Active Duty (EAD), years of education, and socioeconomic class (coded from occupation) were similarly associated with MS risk among white men, black men, and white women. Higher levels of each factor showed increased MS risk.

Multivariate analyzes indicated that for white male WWII subjects an urban address, 9 or more years of education, uncorrected Visual Acuity less than 20/20 at EAD, a more Northern latitude, and a higher proportion of the subject's EAD state population reporting Swedish ancestry each significantly increased the risk of MS.

White male KC subjects showed roughly the same patterns, except that uncorrected Visual Acuity less than 20/20 was associated with lower MS risk (Ancestry/Ethnicity was not studied).

Black male WWII and KC subjects combined, a similar analysis (omitting Ancestry/Ethnicity), showed that only latitude at EAD and 9 or more years of education were independently associated with a significantly higher MS risk.

And, for WWII plus KC white women (also without Ancestry/Ethnicity), only latitude was a significant risk factor in these multivariate analyzes.

The smaller number of subjects, especially in these last two groups, limited the power to detect statistically significant risks in these last analyzes.

Similarities to white men of WWII in univariate analyzes for all other groups suggest that findings for the former would otherwise apply to the latter.

Although the interpretations of these associations may be obscure, in addition to geography, age, sex, and race, per se, higher socioeconomic status is significantly associated with higher MS risk in black and white men and in white women in the United States.



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