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A Case of Double Standard: Sex Differences in Multiple Sclerosis Risk Factors

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22073696

Keywords

multiple sclerosis; sex bias; environmental factors; genetic factors

Funding

  1. Fondazione Italiana Sclerosi Multipla (FISM)

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Multiple sclerosis is a complex autoimmune disease that is more prevalent in women. Gender differences play a critical role in disease onset, progression, and prognosis, highlighting the necessity of understanding the mechanisms behind these differences for developing personalized therapeutic approaches.
Multiple sclerosis is a complex, multifactorial, dysimmune disease prevalent in women. Its etiopathogenesis is extremely intricate, since each risk factor behaves as a variable that is interconnected with others. In order to understand these interactions, sex must be considered as a determining element, either in a protective or pathological sense, and not as one of many variables. In particular, sex seems to highly influence immune response at chromosomal, epigenetic, and hormonal levels. Environmental and genetic risk factors cannot be considered without sex, since sex-based immunological differences deeply affect disease onset, course, and prognosis. Understanding the mechanisms underlying sex-based differences is necessary in order to develop a more effective and personalized therapeutic approach.

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