Prescription-Acquired Acetaminophen Use and the Risk of Asthma in Adults: A Case-Control Study (December).

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Prescription-Acquired Acetaminophen Use and the Risk of Asthma in Adults: A Case-Control Study (December).

Ann Pharmacother. 2012 Nov 20;

Authors: Kelkar M, Cleves MA, Foster HR, Hogan WR, James LP, Martin BC

Abstract
BACKGROUND:Studies have examined the association between acetaminophen use and asthma; however, their interpretation is limited by several methodologic issues.OBJECTIVE:To investigate the association between recent and chronic prescription-acquired acetaminophen use and asthma.METHODS:This retrospective case-control study used a 10% random sample of the IMS LifeLink commercial claims data from 1997 to 2009. Cases had to have at least 1 incident claim of asthma; 3:1 controls matched on age, sex, and region were randomly chosen. Acetaminophen exposure, dose, and duration were measured in the 7- and 30-day (recent) and the 1-year (chronic) look-back periods. Multivariable conditional logistic regression was used to estimate the risk of asthma associated with acetaminophen use adjusted for comorbidities, other drugs increasing asthma risk, and health system factors.RESULTS:There were 28,892 cases and 86,676 controls, with mean age of 42.8 years; 37.7% were males, and 22.6% of cases and 18.2% of controls had acetaminophen exposure in the pre-index year, with mean cumulative doses of 78.7 g and 59.8 g, respectively. There was no significant association between recent prescription acetaminophen exposure and asthma (7 days: OR 1.02, p = 0.74; 30 days: OR 0.97, p = 0.38). Cumulative prescription acetaminophen dose in the year prior increased asthma risk compared to acetaminophen nonusers (?1 kg: OR 1.09, p < 0.001 and >1 kg: OR = 1.60, p = 0.02). Duration of prescription acetaminophen use greater than 30 days was associated with elevated asthma risk (OR 1.39, p < 0.001).CONCLUSIONS:Chronic prescription-acquired acetaminophen use was associated with an increased risk of asthma, while recent use was not. However, over-the-counter acetaminophen use was not captured in this study and further epidemiologic research with complete acetaminophen exposure ascertainment and research on pathophysiologic mechanisms is needed to confirm these relationships.

PMID: 23170033 [PubMed – as supplied by publisher]

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