Fish oil does not appear to improve asthma control in teens, young adults

28 Jan 2019

1

Fish oil does not appear to improve asthma control in adolescents and young adults with uncontrolled asthma who are overweight or obese, according to new research published online in the Annals of the American Thoracic Society.

In Fish Oil Supplementation in Overweight/Obese Patients with Uncontrolled Asthma: A Randomized Trial, Jason E. Lang, MD, MPH, and co-authors report that four grams of fish oil a day for six months did not improve asthma control, as measured by a standard asthma control questionnaire, breathing tests, urgent care visits and severe asthma exacerbations.
"We don't know why asthma control in obese patients is more difficult, but there is growing evidence that obesity causes systemic inflammation," says Dr Lang, lead study author and associate professor of pediatrics at Duke University. "Because the omega-3 fatty acids in fish oil have anti-inflammatory properties, we wanted to test whether fish oil would have therapeutic benefits for these patients."
The 98 overweight / obese participants in the study ranged in age from 12 to 25 (average age: 14.6). All were diagnosed with asthma by a physician but had poor asthma control, despite using a daily inhaled corticosteroid to control their asthma. About half the participants were African American. For every three participants assigned to take fish oil for 25 weeks, one was assigned to take the soy oil placebo.
The researchers also looked at whether a variant in the gene ALOX5 affected study findings. It is known that mutations in the gene can reduce responses to anti-leukotriene drugs. Leukotrienes are inflammatory molecules that play a critical role in triggering asthma attacks. In this study, the ALOX5 variant did appear to be linked to leukotriene production but not to the effectiveness of fish oil in providing asthma control.
The authors wrote that the study's negative findings may not be the last word on fish oil and asthma. They acknowledged that larger doses of fish oil over a longer period of time may produce a different result.
Based on the current study, however, "there is insufficient evidence for clinicians to suggest to patients with uncontrolled asthma that they should take daily fish oil supplements to help their asthma," Dr. Lang said.

Latest articles

Global Chip Sales Expected to Hit $1 Trillion This Year, Industry Group Says

Global Chip Sales Expected to Hit $1 Trillion This Year, Industry Group Says

Citi to Match Government Seed Funding for Children’s ‘Trump Accounts’

Citi to Match Government Seed Funding for Children’s ‘Trump Accounts’

Huawei-Backed Aito Partners With UAE Dealer to Enter Middle East Market

Huawei-Backed Aito Partners With UAE Dealer to Enter Middle East Market

AI is No Bubble: Nvidia Supplier Wistron Sees Order Surge Through 2027

AI is No Bubble: Nvidia Supplier Wistron Sees Order Surge Through 2027

Tech Selloff Weighs on Asian Markets; Indonesia Slides After Moody’s Outlook Cut

Tech Selloff Weighs on Asian Markets; Indonesia Slides After Moody’s Outlook Cut

Amazon Plans $200 Billion AI Spending Surge; Shares Slide on Investor Jitters

Amazon Plans $200 Billion AI Spending Surge; Shares Slide on Investor Jitters

Server CPU Shortages Grip China as AI Boom Strains Intel and AMD Supply Chains

Server CPU Shortages Grip China as AI Boom Strains Intel and AMD Supply Chains

OpenAI launches ‘Frontier’ AI agent platform in enterprise push

OpenAI launches ‘Frontier’ AI agent platform in enterprise push

Toyota set for third straight quarterly profit drop as costs and tariffs weigh

Toyota set for third straight quarterly profit drop as costs and tariffs weigh