A large new observational study finds more evidence of an association
between daily aspirin use and modestly lower cancer mortality, but
suggests any reduction may be smaller than that observed in a recent
analysis. The study, appearing early online in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute
(JNCI), provides additional support for a potential benefit of daily
aspirin use for cancer mortality, but the authors say important
questions remain about the size of the potential benefit.
A recent analysis pooling results from existing randomized trials of
daily aspirin for prevention of vascular events found an estimated 37%
reduction in cancer mortality among those using aspirin for five years
or more. But uncertainty remains about how much daily aspirin use may
lower cancer mortality, as the size of this pooled analysis was limited
and two very large randomized trials of aspirin taken every other day
found no effect on overall cancer mortality.
For the current study, American Cancer Society researchers led by
Eric J. Jacobs, Ph.D., analyzed information from 100,139 predominantly
elderly participants in the Cancer Prevention Study II Nutrition Cohort
who reported aspirin use on questionnaires, did not have cancer at the
start of the study, and were followed for up to 11 years. They found
daily aspirin use was associated with an estimated 16% lower overall
risk of cancer mortality, both among people who reported taking aspirin
daily for at least five years and among those who reported shorter term
daily use. The lower overall cancer mortality was driven by about 40%
lower mortality from cancers of the gastrointestinal tract (such as
esophageal, stomach, and colorectal cancer) and about 12% lower
mortality from cancers outside the gastrointestinal tract.
The reduction in cancer mortality observed in the current study is
considerably smaller than the 37% reduction reported in the recent
pooled analysis of randomized trials. The authors note that their study
was observational, not randomized, and therefore could have
underestimated or overestimated potential effects on cancer mortality if
participants who took aspirin daily had different underlying risk
factors for fatal cancer than those who did not. However, the study's
large size is a strength in determining how much daily aspirin use might
lower cancer mortality.
"Expert committees that develop clinical guidelines will consider the
totality of evidence about aspirin's risks and benefits when guidelines
for aspirin use are next updated," said Dr. Jacobs. "Although recent
evidence about aspirin use and cancer is encouraging, it is still
premature to recommend people start taking aspirin specifically to
prevent cancer. Even low-dose aspirin can substantially increase the
risk of serious gastrointestinal bleeding. Decisions about aspirin use
should be made by balancing the risks against the benefits in the
context of each individual's medical history. Any decision about daily
aspirin use should be made only in consultation with a health care
professional."
Journal Reference:
- Eric J. Jacobs, Christina C. Newton, Susan M. Gapstur, Michael J. Thun. Daily Aspirin Use and Cancer Mortality in a Large US Cohort. Journal of the National Cancer Institute, August 10, 2012 DOI: 10.1093/jnci/djs318
Courtesy: ScienceDaily
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