Thursday, March 22, 2012

Aspirin Cuts Cancer Risk After 3 Years

Aspirin, the 3-cent painkiller whose origins can be traced to Hippocrates, reduces the chances of developing or dying from cancer earlier than previously thought and also prevents tumors from spreading, studies showed. People who took a daily dose of aspirin had a 24 percent lower rate of developing cancer after three years and were 37 percent less likely to die from the disease after five years than those who didn’t, according to a study in The Lancet medical journal Tuesday. The rate was similar for men and women. Doctors have known since 2007 that aspirin can reduce the long-term risk of dying from cancer, though those benefits are only seen after at least eight years. The new studies show the drug also has short-term advantages, suggesting it could be used to treat some tumors, said Peter Rothwell, a professor at the University of Oxford who led the research. “Aspirin differs from virtually all other drugs in that situation, both in the sense that it’s considerably cheaper, but also it’s probably a lot safer,” Rothwell said in a telephone interview. The researchers also found that the risk of internal bleeding — a potential side effect of aspirin — wanes over three or four years, Rothwell said. After that, the risk of dying from a bleed was lower among those taking aspirin than those who weren’t, the study found. 5 Million Cases Cancer is the second-most common cause of premature death worldwide and 5 million new cases are diagnosed in Europe and the United States each year, Rothwell and colleagues wrote. The risk of the disease starts to increase “steeply” from about age 45, suggesting that might be a good time to start taking aspirin, Rothwell said. The risk of internal bleeding from aspirin increases from about age 65, which would be a good time to stop, he said. “People with a family history of cancer in middle age, or a family history particularly of colon cancer, or people with vascular risk factors who are at risk of heart attack or stroke” would be most likely to benefit from taking aspirin, Rothwell said. “If someone’s completely healthy, and has a good diet, doesn’t smoke, does regular exercise, has no risk factors for cancer or for heart attacks and stroke, then the benefit will probably be greater than the risk, but the benefit will be relatively small.” Rothwell, 47, said he started taking daily aspirin three or four years ago. Prevents Tumors From Spreading Bayer AG, based in Leverkusen, Germany, invented aspirin and has sold it since 1899. A bottle of 500 generic aspirin tablets marketed by Walgreen Co. costs $14.99 on drugstore.com, or 3 cents a pill. The drug is based on salicin, a chemical found in the bark of the willow tree that was first mentioned about 2,400 years ago by Hippocrates, an ancient Greek considered the father of Western medicine. Bark containing salicin was used by the Romans and North American Indians to treat cold, flu, aches, pains, and infections, Rothwell said. Rothwell and colleagues reviewed 51 trials involving about 78,000 people concerning the use of aspirin to prevent heart attacks and stroke. The reduction in the risk of dying from cancer was probably because aspirin prevents tumors spreading, he said. Two other studies published in The Lancet and The Lancet Oncology Tuesday showed that aspirin reduced the risk of any cancer spreading to other organs by 36 percent and certain types of tumors by 46 percent. ‘Exciting Development’ “We still need to do trials of aspirin in treatment of cancer to show that the benefit is definitely there if you start taking it after the cancer’s been diagnosed,” Rothwell said. “But potentially it would be a highly cost-effective way of preventing the spread of cancers.” He’s now involved in a study testing aspirin to treat people with colorectal cancer, and another trial with lung cancer patients is starting, he said. The drug is already recommended in countries including the United States for middle-aged patients at risk of heart disease or stroke, Rothwell said. “This is an exciting development,” Peter Johnson, the chief clinician of Cancer Research UK, said in an e-mailed statement. “We now need some definitive advice from the government as to whether aspirin should be recommended more widely.”

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