💾 Archived View for gmi.noulin.net › mobileNews › 2691.gmi captured on 2021-12-05 at 23:47:19. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
⬅️ Previous capture (2021-12-03)
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
By Fergus Walsh Medical correspondent, BBC News
A small daily dose of aspirin - 75mg - substantially reduces death rates from a
range of common cancers, a study suggests.
Research at Oxford University and other centres found that it cut overall
cancer deaths by at least a fifth.
The study, published in the Lancet, covered some 25,000 patients, mostly from
the UK.
Experts say the findings show aspirin's benefits often outweighed its
associated risk of causing bleeding.
Aspirin is already known to cut the risk of heart attack and stroke among those
at increased risk. But the protective effects against cardiovascular disease
are thought to be small for healthy adults, and aspirin increases the risks of
stomach and gut bleeds.
However, this latest research shows that when weighing up the risks and
benefits of taking aspirin, experts should also consider its protective effect
against cancer.
Those patients who were given aspirin had a 25% lower risk of death from cancer
during the trial period and a 10% reduction in death from any cause compared to
patients who were not given the drug.
Lasting protection
The treatment with aspirin lasted for between four and eight years, but long
term-follow-up of around 12,500 patients showed the protective effect continued
for 20 years in both men and women.
Start Quote
We encourage anyone interested in taking aspirin on a regular basis to talk to
their GP first
End Quote Ed Young Cancer Research UK
Lead researcher Professor Peter Rothwell said the findings might well
underestimate the reduction in deaths that would result from longer-term
treatment with aspirin.
The risk of cancer death was reduced by 20% over 20 years. For individual
cancers the reduction was about 40% for bowel cancer, 30% for lung cancer, 10%
for prostate cancer and 60% for oesophageal cancer.
The reductions in pancreas, stomach and brain cancers were difficult to
quantify because of smaller numbers of deaths.
There was also not enough data to show an effect on breast or ovarian cancer
and the authors suggest this is because there were not enough women in the
trials. Large-scale studies investigating the effects on these cancers are
under way.
Professor Rothwell said he was not urging healthy middle-aged adults to
immediately start taking aspirin, but said the evidence on cancer "tips things
towards it being well worth it". The benefit in cancer reduction were found
from a low daily dose of 75mg.
Professor Rothwell said the annual risk of major internal bleeding was about 1
in 1,000 and aspirin roughly doubled that risk. But he said the danger of major
bleeding was "very low" in middle age but increased dramatically after 75.
Start Quote
Aspirin should be thought of in the same context as lifestyle changes such as
diet and exercise which can help to preserve health
End Quote Professor Peter Elwood Cardiff University
A sensible time to consider starting daily aspirin use would be between 45-50,
continuing for around 25 years, he said.
Cancer Research UK described the results as "promising". But Ed Young, head of
health information and evidence, said: "We encourage anyone interested in
taking aspirin on a regular basis to talk to their GP first."
Professor Peter Elwood, an epidemiologist from Cardiff University, who carried
out some of the first studies into the effects of aspirin on health, said
individuals should make up their own minds:
"Aspirin should be thought of in the same context as lifestyle changes such as
diet and exercise which can help to preserve health."
Professor Elwood said taking aspirin at night and with calcium seemed to
enhance its effects. He suggested taking it with a glass of milk as this could
also reduce stomach irritation.