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Interview on the Epstein-Barr virus and multiple sclerosis

Soon a vaccine against multiple sclerosis? This is the encouraging prospect envisaged by a recent study which demonstrates for the first time that the Epstein-Barr virus is the main cause of this autoimmune disease which damages the central nervous system. The article, published on January 13, 2021 in the journal Science, is therefore a source of hope for the 2.8 million people who suffer from this disease, for which there is as yet no vaccine or cure. Science and Future asked Harvard University epidemiologist Alberto Ascherio, director of the study, who explains to us why it was so difficult to prove this causal link as well as the therapeutic avenues envisaged.

Sciences et Avenir: What did we know about the link between the Epstein-Barr virus and multiple sclerosis before this study?

Alberto Ascherio: This link has been suspected for more than 40 years, but the prevailing thought was that this association did not imply causation. Most of the medical literature defines multiple sclerosis as an autoimmune disease with an unknown cause. Because it was very difficult to establish this causal link: the Epstein-Barr virus is present in the vast majority of people (it is estimated that this is the case for around 95% of the world’s population), so all people with multiple sclerosis had the virus, but also the majority of people without the disease. It’s as if we were in a country where everyone smokes, some will develop lung cancer, but it’s very complicated to demonstrate that it’s because of cigarettes, because the majority of those who smoke don’t will not have this cancer.

And then, how did you demonstrate this causal link?

This is the first time that we have followed a large cohort of young women and men for so long (nearly 10 years), many of whom did not have the virus at the start of the study.

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