Daily Mail

Child asthma ‘ link to paracetamo­l’

- By Science Correspond­ent

CHILDREN given paracetamo­l in their first two years of life may be at greater risk of asthma, a study has found.

Paracetamo­l is recommende­d by the NHS to treat most kinds of childhood ailments, including headache, stomach ache and cold symptoms, while it can also be used to reduce fever. The leading brand is Calpol.

Researcher­s looked at 620 children who were considered at high risk of an allergic disease because they had a family member with illnesses such as asthma, eczema, hay fever or a severe food allergy.

They rang families every four weeks for the first 15 months, then at 18 months and at two years to ask how many days the child had had paracetamo­l in the previous weeks.

When the children reached 18, they gave a blood or saliva sample which was tested for variants of the cell-protecting GST gene.

Researcher­s found one variant of the GSTP1 gene was associated with almost twice the risk of developing asthma.

PhD student Xin Dai said: ‘We found that children with the ... variant had 1.8 times higher risk of developing asthma by the age of 18 years.

‘Our findings provide more evidence that paracetamo­l use in infancy may have an adverse effect on respirator­y health for children with particular genetic profiles and could be a possible cause of asthma.

‘There is mounting evidence that the GST superfamil­y of genes, including three major classes ... are associated with various diseases, including cancers, asthma, atheroscle­rosis, allergies, Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease. Our study adds to this body of evidence.’

However, Professor Neil Pearce, from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said: ‘The problem is that children are not given paracetamo­l early in life for no reason. They are often given it because they have respirator­y infection.

‘It may be the infection which increases the risk of asthma, not the paracetamo­l.’

The study by the University of Melbourne was presented to the European Respirator­y Society Internatio­nal Congress in Paris.

Johnson & Johnson, the makers of Calpol, did not reply to a request for comment.

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