Exposome, oxidative stress and inflammation in persons with multiple sclerosis: the EXPOSITION study protocol
Maria Cristina Monti, Rachele De Giuseppe, Gloria Bertoli, Mulubirhan Assefa Alemayohu, Ghanya Al-Naqeb, Elena Ballante, Roberto Bergamaschi, Tania Camboni, Camilla Ceccarani, Chiara Ceriani, Elena Colombo, Clarissa Consolandi, Francesca Costabile, Stefano Decesari

TL;DR
This study explores how environmental and biological factors relate to multiple sclerosis, aiming to improve understanding and treatment strategies.
Contribution
The EXPOSITION study integrates external and internal exposome data to uncover MS mechanisms and potential interventions.
Findings
The study will assess associations between environmental exposures and biological markers like microRNAs and cytokines in MS patients.
Advanced statistical models will be used to analyze the relationship between external factors and internal biological outcomes.
Findings may lead to personalized therapies and public health strategies for MS.
Abstract
The exposome represents the totality of external and internal exposures an individual encounters throughout life and plays a critical role in developing many chronic diseases, including multiple sclerosis (MS). MS is a multifactorial disease influenced by both genetic and environmental factors. The EXPOSITION study (registered on www.clinicaltrials.gov, NCT06325358) aims to investigate the association between environmental exposures (external exposome) and biological markers of oxidative stress and inflammation (internal exposome) in people with MS. This cross-sectional study will involve 200 individuals with MS, assessed for lifestyle and occupational variables and biological markers, including circulating microRNAs, neurofilament light chains, pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines, and gut/nasal microbiota composition. The study will use advanced statistical models, such as generalised…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth, Environment, Cognitive Aging · Air Quality and Health Impacts · Nutritional Studies and Diet
