Home About Us Advocacy Media Contact Us Site Map Privacy Français  
Multiple Sclerosis Society of CanadaSociété canadienne de la sclérose en plaquesfinding a cure - enhancing quality of life
Multiple Sclerosis Support & Services Treatments Donate Now Get Involved Special Events

 

News in Research

Research We Fund

Research Explained

Take Part in Research

Apply for a Research Grant

Search Research


Research Home

Helpful links:

Stem Cell Research

Research Bulletins

MS Scientific Research Foundation

Research Summaries

MS Research Accomplishments



Research
  Small FontMedium FontLarge Font

Canadian study finds MS increasing among women

View or print this bulletin in its original format.

You will need ADOBE ACROBAT READER to view this document listed above - it's FREE.

Medical Update Memo
October 31, 2006

SUMMARY
Researchers using a Canada-wide database have found that multiple sclerosis in women has approximately tripled over the past 60 years and that the female to male sex ratio now exceeds three women with MS for every one man (3.5:1). The study is reported in the November 2006 issue of Lancet Neurology. There has been debate about whether MS is increasing with most observers attributing an apparent increase to better awareness, education, more neurologists and MRI scanners or a combination of all of these. The increasing sex ratio in Canada precedes changes in diagnostic probability so these results should resolve this question. The longitudinal data also supports the reports from earlier in the twentieth century that the MS sex ratio was once one-to-one. The rapid change over a short period must be environmental but with a probably interaction with genes. Governments and health care economists need to take this new information into account when planning for current and future expenditures on disease management and research. The study was funded by the MS Scientific Research Foundation, which is related to the Multiple Sclerosis Society of Canada.

DETAILS
Lead investigators George Ebers, M.D., (University of Oxford) and A. Dessa Sadovnick, Ph.D, (University of British Columbia) reported in the November 2006 issue of Lancet Neurology that MS has increased in women over the past 60 years. Using a Canada wide-data base of more than 27,000 people with MS, they found that the female to male sex ratio now exceeds 3.5 women with MS for every one man (3.5:1) This ratio was one-to-one in the early decades of the twentieth century.

The researchers used the database developed by the Canadian Collaborative Project on Genetic Susceptibility to MS, which has been funded by the MS Scientific Research Foundation since the early 1990s. The Foundation is related to the Multiple Sclerosis Society of Canada. The Canadian Collaborative Project has gathered detailed information about demographics, family history and clinical aspects of MS from people with MS attending the participating Canadian MS clinics.

For this study, the researchers identified 27,074 people with MS born between 1931 and 1980. Of the total, 19,417 were women and 7,657 were men. The participants were grouped into five-year blocks to calculate the sex ratio and change in incidence. Comparison of the sex ratio found a significant, progressive, gradual increase in the proportion of Canadian women with MS compared to men and that the female to male sex ratio of MS has been increasing in Canada for at least 60 years. There was no indication that the male rate had changed. The duration of the change eliminates confounders such as earlier diagnosis in women, and its timing long precedes MRI scanning and public awareness of MS.

Drs. Ebers, Sadovnick and colleagues noted that the factors causing the increasing number of women with MS are speculative at this point. They suggested, given the short time period in which the increase occurred, the factors must be environmental in nature, perhaps resulting from gene-environment interaction. The increase precedes birth control pills but smoking is less easily excluded. Other lifestyle factors mentioned included the higher numbers and changing roles of women in the workplace, time spent outdoors, dietary factors and alterations in the timing of childbearing years. The investigators suspect a tie-in with the strong maternal effect found earlier by the study (Ebers et al. Lancet 2004). In this study of half siblings who both have MS with only one parent in common, the mother was much more likely to be the common parent.

Study investigators noted the findings may provide insights into possible disease causes and have implications in health care strategies in managing and treating MS and the focus of research efforts. The data imply that MS is preventable in the country of residence, and that women have an independent or accessory route to become susceptible to MS. The year of birth sex ratio appears to provide a simple way of tracking disease incidence. Year of birth and sex ratio could be used as measures for
intervention or prevention studies, according to Drs. Ebers and Sadovnick.

This study by members of the Canadian Collaborative Project on Genetic Susceptibility to MS is one of more than 50 papers that have been published since the project began. Collectively, the project has contributed vital knowledge about genetic aspects of MS and their relationship to environmental factors, said Dr. William J. McIlroy, national medical advisor, Multiple Sclerosis Society of Canada.

ASK MS Information System Code: 2.3.3.c

National Research Department
National Marketing and Communications Department

Disclaimer
The Multiple Sclerosis Society of Canada is an independent, voluntary health agency and does not approve, endorse or recommend any specific product or therapy but provides information to assist individuals in making their own decisions.

Back to top line

 
Multiple Sclerosis Society of Canada
Toll free to reach the nearest regional office: 1 800 268-7582

To locate the MS Society office near you, please select your region:

E-mail: info@mssociety.ca
(Please provide your town and province in your e-mail)

Multiple Sclerosis   Support & Services   Research   Treatments   Donate Now   Get Involved    Special Events

Home    About Us    Advocacy    Media    Contact Us    Site Map    Privacy    Français