Studies show 100,000 young people are routinely prescribed an asthma controller medication called salmeterol, which sometimes appears to offer little benefit to some of them.
Researchers at 91快活林 and Sussex Medical School (BSMS), together with colleagues at the Universities of Dundee, Aberdeen and Queen Mary University of London, will start trials on children and young adults aged 12-18 with asthma who are not responding well to the standard treatment.
Professor Somnath Mukhopadhyay, Chair of Paediatrics at BSMS, said: "Our research has previously found that around 15 per cent of children and young adults have a particular gene variation that is linked to poor asthma control with this treatment. That’s why we are investigating whether young people’s genetic make-up should be taken into account when deciding whether to give them the routinely-used salmeterol, or an alternative medication called montelukast.”