Note this article that just came out in the National
Review of Clinical Oncology and posted by Stone Heart News on April 9. This new report by the American Cancer
Society supports and broadens what I mentioned to you at the March
Institutes. Read the article below.
Aspirin, cancer-prevention-care link getting stronger
Posted on April 9, 2012 by Stone Hearth News A new report by American Cancer
Society scientists says new data showing aspirin’s potential role in reducing
the risk of cancer death bring us considerably closer to the time when cancer
prevention can be included in clinical guidelines for the use of aspirin in
preventative care. The report, published early online in Nature Reviews
Clinical Oncology, says even a 10% reduction in overall cancer incidence beginning
during the first 10 years of treatment could tip the balance of benefits and
risks favorably in average-risk populations.
Current guidelines for the use of aspirin in disease
prevention consider only its cardiovascular benefits, weighed against the
potential harm from aspirin-induced bleeding. While daily aspirin use has also
been convincingly shown to reduce the risk of colorectal cancer and recurrence
of adenomatous polyps, these benefits alone do not outweigh harms from
aspirin-induced bleeding in average-risk populations. But recently published
secondary analyses of cardiovascular trials have provided the first randomized
evidence that daily aspirin use may also reduce the incidence of all cancers
combined, even at low doses (75-100 mg daily).
The current review, led by Michael J. Thun, M.D., vice
president emeritus of epidemiology and surveillance research for the American
Cancer Society was not designed as a comprehensive review of the literature,
but instead is a focused discussion of the key outstanding issues in using
aspirin as a cancer prevention tool.
The report says recently published meta-analyses of
results from randomized trials of daily aspirin treatment to prevent vascular
events have provided provocative evidence that daily aspirin at doses of 75 mg
and above might lower both overall cancer incidence and overall cancer
mortality.
In six primary prevention trials of daily low-dose
aspirin, randomization to aspirin treatment was associated with an
approximately 20% reduction in overall cancer incidence between 3 and
5 years after initiation of the intervention (metaodds
ratio [OR] = 0.81; 95% CI 0.67-0.98) and a 30% reduction during follow up more
than
5 years after randomization (meta-OR = 0.70; 95% CI
0.56-0.88). Cancer mortality was also reduced during study follow up that
happened more than 5 years after the start of aspirin use (meta-OR = 0.63; 95%
CI 0.49-0.82) in analyses that included 34 trials of daily
aspirin at various doses. Surprisingly, the size of the observed benefit did
not increase with daily doses of aspirin above 75-100 mg. Notably, these
meta-analyses excluded results from the Women’s Health Study (WHS), a large
10-year-long trial of 100 mg of aspirin taken every other day, which reported
no reduction in cancer incidence or mortality.
Article: The role of aspirin in cancer prevention. Thun
MJ, Jacobs EJ, Patrono C., Nat Rev Clin Oncol. 2012 Apr 3. doi:10.1038/nrclinonc.2011.199. [Epub ahead of print]
Dr. Jackie McClelland, Food and Nutrition Specialist, NC State
University
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