Aspirin may be used to prevent cancer

Washington – Aspirin, the drug taken by countless people around the world to relief pain and reduce their risk of developing heart disease, may also help prevent cancer.

A growing body of evidence suggests that taking aspirin may reduce an individual’s chances of developing colorectal cancer and perhaps other malignancies, but whether that evidence is strong enough to outweigh the risks of prescribing it to millions of healthy people is the subject of debate among researchers at the ESMO 2012 Congress in Vienna.

Arguing in favor of the question – “Is aspirin (NSAID) ready for chemoprevention of colorectal adenoma/cancer?” – is Prof Robert Benamouzig from the Department of Gastroenterology, AvicenneHospital, Bobigny, France.

“The efficacy of aspirin in preventing colorectal cancer has been made obvious by more than twenty years of research,” said Prof Benamouzig.

“In 2010, researchers published the 20-year follow-up of five pooled randomized trials that assessed the effect of aspirin on colorectal cancer incidence and mortality. The study of more than 14,000 patients found that daily aspirin at any dose reduced risk of colorectal cancer by 24 percent and associated deaths by 35 percent after a delay of about 8 to 10 years.”

“In these trials, the reduction of colorectal cancer rates was in essence a side-effect of treatment. None of them had such a reduction as their primary outcome. Nevertheless, the evidence that aspirin is effective for preventing these colorectal cancers is very strong,” Prof Benamouzig stated.

Arguing that the answer to the question should be “No” is Prof Nadir Arber, Director of the Integrated Cancer Prevention at the Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center in Israel.

“NSAIDs and in particular aspirin are very promising in secondary prevention of colorectal neoplasia, however their role in primary prevention is still not proven,” Prof Arber said.

“This means that the majority of the population does not need, and is not going to benefit from aspirin use.

“Having said that, specific high-risk populations definitely can benefit from aspirin intake, including people with hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer, familial adenomatous polyposis, existing colorectal cancer or adenoma. In the future based on genomic profile, we would be able to identify people who are at high risk of developing colorectal cancers and who might benefit from aspirin therapy,” he noted.

Before aspirin can be used for preventing these cancers, we need to develop means of identifying people who are going to benefit from the drug without developing side-effects, Prof Arber said.

Risks of taking aspirin include gastrointestinal bleeding and intracranial hemorrhage.

“We need a study that will measure overall morbidity and mortality and not efficacy and toxicity in a single organ ordisease such as cardio-vascular disease,” he said.

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