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When Genes Meet Early Life: Rethinking the Timing of Multiple Sclerosis Risk
When Genes Meet Early Life: Rethinking the Timing of Multiple Sclerosis Risk

This blog post explores a UK Biobank study showing that multiple sclerosis risk is not fixed across life but changes with age, genetic burden, sex, and early environmental exposures. By using a time-to-event approach, the study reveals that genetic susceptibility and female sex exert stronger effects in younger adulthood, while factors such as smoking, infectious mononucleosis, body mass index predisposition, and season of birth further shape disease risk. The findings highlight the value of longitudinal data for improving risk prediction and understanding when multiple sclerosis vulnerability becomes clinically significant.

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