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IntroductionFemale sex steroid hormones have been implicated in sex-related differences in the development and clinical outcomes of asthma. The role of exogenous sex steroids, however, remains unclear. Our recent systematic review highlighted the lack of high-quality population-based studies investigating this subject. We aim to investigate whether the use of hormonal contraception and hormone replacement therapy (HRT), subtypes and route of administration are associated with asthma onset and clinical outcomes in reproductive age and perimenopausal/postmenopausal females.Methods and analysisUsing the Optimum Patient Care Research Database (OPCRD), a national primary care database in the UK, we will construct a retrospective longitudinal cohort of reproductive age (16-45 years) and perimenopausal/postmenopausal (46-70 years) females. We will estimate the risk of new-onset asthma using Cox regression and multilevel modelling for repeated asthma outcomes, such as asthma attacks. We will adjust for confounding factors in all analyses. We will evaluate interactions between the use of exogenous sex hormones and body mass index and smoking by calculating the relative excess risk due to interaction and the attributable proportion due to interaction. With 90% power, we need 23 700 reproductive age females to detect a 20% reduction (risk ratio 0.8) in asthma attacks for use of any hormonal contraception and 6000 perimenopausal/postmenopausal females to detect a 40% (risk ratio 1.40) increased risk of asthma attacks for use of any HRT.Ethics and disseminationWe have obtained approval (ADEPT1317) from the Anonymised Data Ethics and Protocol Transparency Committee which grants project-specific ethics approvals for the use of OPCRD data. Optimum Patient Care has an existing NHS Health Research Authority ethics approval for the use of OPCRD data for research (15/EM/150). We will present our findings at national and international scientific meetings and publish the results in international peer-reviewed journals.Trial registration numberEUPAS22967.

Original publication

DOI

10.1136/bmjopen-2017-020075

Type

Journal article

Journal

BMJ open

Publication Date

06/2018

Volume

8

Addresses

Krefting Research Centre, Institute of Medicine, University of Gothenburg, Gothenburg, Sweden.

Keywords

Humans, Asthma, Gonadal Steroid Hormones, Contraceptives, Oral, Hormonal, Body Mass Index, Hormone Replacement Therapy, Odds Ratio, Retrospective Studies, Smoking, Research Design, Databases, Factual, Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Middle Aged, Primary Health Care, Female, Male, Young Adult, United Kingdom