Aspirin in cancer prevention
Posted by kim on Sunday, March 25, 2012 Under: General Health
More evidence for aspirin in cancer prevention
Friday, March 23, 2012. Articles published this week in The Lancet and The
Lancet Oncology add evidence to a benefit for aspirin in protecting against
cancer and preventing metastasis in pre-existing disease.
Professor Peter M Rothwell of the University of Oxford and his colleagues
conducted the research described in all three reports. In the first article, Dr
Rothwell's team analyzed data from 51 clinical trials that compared the effects
of daily aspirin to no aspirin on the risk of cardiovascular events. They
observed a 15 percent lower risk of dying of cancer over the course of the
trials for those who received daily aspirin, which improved to a 37 percent
reduction for those who received aspirin for five years or more. Cancer
incidence was reduced as well, resulting in a 23 percent decrease in men and a
25 percent lower risk in women.
In the second Lancet study, Dr Rothwell and his associates reviewed five
large trials that sought to determine the effect of daily aspirin on the effects
of vascular events. Among 17,285 participants, 1,101 cases of cancer were
diagnosed during the trials, including 563 fatal cases. Over an average 6.5 year
follow up period, those who received aspirin had a 36 percent lower risk of
being diagnosed with cancer with distant metastases, mainly due to a reduction
in the proportion of metastatic versus nonmetastatic adenocarcinoma. Aspirin
also reduced the risk of dying of cancer among adenocarcinoma patients. The
effects were independent of gender and age, and were additionally observed in
association with a low-dose, slow-release aspirin designed to inhibit platelets
while having little systemic bioavailability. "That aspirin prevents metastasis
at least partly accounts for the reduced cancer mortality recently reported in
trials of aspirin versus control in prevention of vascular events and suggests
that aspirin will also be effective in treatment of some cancers," the authors
write. "The lack of dependence of this effect of aspirin on its systemic
bioavailability suggests that it is platelet-mediated. Other antiplatelet drugs
might therefore have a similar effect on risk of metastasis and combining
different drugs might increase benefit."
The review published in The Lancet Oncology analyzed case-control and
cohort studies that compared the risk of cancer experienced by aspirin and
nonaspirin users. "Long-term follow-up of randomized trials of aspirin in
prevention of vascular events showed that daily aspirin reduced the incidence of
colorectal cancer and several other cancers and reduced metastasis," the authors
write. "However, statistical power was inadequate to establish effects on less
common cancers and on cancers in women. Observational studies could provide this
information if results can be shown to be reliable. We therefore compared
effects of aspirin on risk and outcome of cancer in observational studies versus
randomized trials."
The results of these observational studies indicate a 38 percent lower risk
of colorectal cancer over a 20 year period in association with aspirin use,
which is in agreement with the reduction found in clinical trials. Similar
decreases were found for esophageal, stomach, breast and biliary cancers.
In a commentary published in The Lancet, Dr Andrew T Chan and Dr Nancy R
Cook of Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School write that
"Rothwell and colleagues' impressive collection of data moves us another step
closer to broadening recommendations for aspirin use. Moreover, future
evidence-based guidelines for aspirin prophylaxis can no longer consider the use
of aspirin for the prevention of vascular disease in isolation from cancer
prevention."
In : General Health