Aspirin in the news

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Nana b
Nana b Member Posts: 3,030 Member
edited March 2012 in Colorectal Cancer #1
Good thing I started back on my low dose aspirin a month ago... if it helps, all the better!

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/21/health/research/studies-link-aspirin-daily-use-to-reduced-cancer-risk.html?_r=1


better info

Studies Link Daily Doses of Aspirin to Reduced Risk of Cancer
By RONI CARYN RABIN
Published: March 20, 2012
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Taking aspirin every day may significantly reduce the risk of many cancers and prevent tumors from spreading, according to two new studies published on Tuesday.

Tim Boyle/Getty Images
Drawbacks of daily doses of aspirin include a risk of gastrointestinal bleeding.
The findings add to a body of evidence suggesting that cheap and widely available aspirin may be a powerful if overlooked weapon in the battle against cancer. But the research also poses difficult questions for doctors and public health officials, as regular doses of aspirin can cause gastrointestinal bleeding and other side effects. Past studies have suggested that the drawbacks of daily use may outweigh the benefits, particularly in healthy patients.

One of the new studies examined patient data from dozens of large, long-term randomized controlled trials involving tens of thousands of men and women. Researchers at the University of Oxford found that after three years of daily aspirin use, the risk of developing cancer was reduced by almost 25 percent when compared with a control group not taking aspirin. After five years, the risk of dying of cancer was reduced by 37 percent among those taking aspirin.

A second paper that analyzed five large randomized controlled studies in Britain found that over six and a half years on average, daily aspirin use reduced the risk of metastatic cancer by 36 percent and the risk of adenocarcinomas — common solid cancers including colon, lung and prostate cancer — by 46 percent.

Daily aspirin use also reduced the risk of progressing to metastatic disease, particularly in patients with colorectal cancer, the studies reported.

The studies, led by Dr. Peter M. Rothwell, a professor of clinical neurology at the University of Oxford, were published in the medical journal The Lancet. A third paper by Dr. Rothwell and his colleagues, published in The Lancet Oncology, compared the findings of observational studies and randomized trials of aspirin.

There is an urgent need for clinical trials of treatment regimens incorporating aspirin, Dr. Rothwell said.

“What really jumps out at you in terms of prevention is the striking 75 percent reduction in esophageal cancer and a 40 to 50 percent reduction in colorectal cancer, which is the most common cancer right now,” Dr. Rothwell said. “In terms of prevention, anyone with a family history would be sensible to take aspirin,” he added.

But while some experts called the new findings “provocative” and “encouraging,” mounting evidence about the preventive promise of aspirin puts health providers in a quandary. Aspirin increases the risk of not just of gastrointestinal bleeding, but of hemorrhagic strokes.

The new studies, however, also found that the risk of bleeding in aspirin users diminished over time, and that the risk of death from brain bleeds was actually lower in the aspirin users than in the comparison group.

“I think he’s on to something. I just want to be cautious, and I don’t want to exaggerate,” said Dr. Otis W. Brawley, chief medical officer and executive vice president of the American Cancer Society. “I’m not ready to say that everybody ought to take a baby aspirin a day to prevent cancer.”

Dr. Andrew T. Chan, an associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and co-author of a comment published with the articles in The Lancet, said the studies, despite their limitations, “raise the level of excitement about using aspirin as a chemopreventive agent.”

“If you start to include the possibility that aspirin reduces the cancer risk beyond colon cancer, then the risk-benefit ratio shifts quite a bit, especially for those cancers where we have little to offer in the way of screening and early diagnosis,” Dr. Chan said.

The randomized clinical trials the Oxford investigators examined were not focused on cancer prevention; they were originally intended to study the effects of aspirin on preventing heart disease. The application of the findings to cancer prevention may be flawed, some experts said.

In the United States, two major studies of low-dose aspirin to prevent cancer did not find reductions in cancer with aspirin use. Those findings were excluded from analysis by the Oxford researchers because they involved use of aspirin every other day, rather than daily use.

Though many Americans use baby aspirin daily to reduce their risk of heart disease, patients are generally advised to do so only when their cardiac risk is presumed to outweigh the risks of taking aspirin. Physicians remain extremely reluctant to recommend long-term use of aspirin in a healthy population.

Some cancer doctors commended the new research, saying said that despite the limitations of the analyses, no other long-term clinical trials of aspirin and cancer are likely to be done because of the enormous expense involved and the fact that aspirin is a cheap generic drug.

Comments

  • Buckwirth
    Buckwirth Member Posts: 1,258 Member
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    Cheap Generic Drug?
    Bayer has been marketing Aspirin since 1897, still owns the trademark in over 80 countries, and still rakes in over one billion dollars a year in revenue! Profit margins on this little, generic, otc are high for everyone in the supply channel, but for Bayer they reach the courts definition of obscene (compare retails between the generic and Bayer at your local drug store, then consider that the retailer makes more profit on the generic, and cost to produce is the same).

    I would bet that Aspirin adds more to Bayer's bottom line than any single prescription drug they design and manufacture.
  • Nana b
    Nana b Member Posts: 3,030 Member
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    Buckwirth said:

    Cheap Generic Drug?
    Bayer has been marketing Aspirin since 1897, still owns the trademark in over 80 countries, and still rakes in over one billion dollars a year in revenue! Profit margins on this little, generic, otc are high for everyone in the supply channel, but for Bayer they reach the courts definition of obscene (compare retails between the generic and Bayer at your local drug store, then consider that the retailer makes more profit on the generic, and cost to produce is the same).

    I would bet that Aspirin adds more to Bayer's bottom line than any single prescription drug they design and manufacture.

    Yes, they sale billions of
    Yes, they sale billions of these little bottles a year. They are cheaper then most hamburger meals.
  • smokeyjoe
    smokeyjoe Member Posts: 1,425 Member
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    Nana b said:

    Yes, they sale billions of
    Yes, they sale billions of these little bottles a year. They are cheaper then most hamburger meals.

    I wonder when these will
    I wonder when these will become available (if ever) ....NO-donating NSAIDs (NO-NSAIDs) represent a promising development in the prevention and/or treatment of cancer. They consist of a traditional NSAID to which a group donating NO has been covalently attached via an aromatic or aliphatic spacer (Fig. 1). Emerging data indicate that these compounds combine the chemopreventive properties of traditional NSAIDs against cancer with enhanced safety and efficacy (Fiorrucci et al., 2002; Rigas and Williams, 2002). In the case of NO-donating aspirin (NO-ASA), for example, we have reported it to be between 2540- to > 5000-fold more potent than traditional ASA in suppressing colon cancer cell growth (Williams et al., 2001). Such enhancement has been attributed primarily to the presence of the NO donating moiety on the new modified NSAID molecule and to a lesser degree to the spacer molecule (Kaza et al., 2002). Studies with NO-ASA using an animal model of colon cancer demonstrated that it is more efficacious than ASA in preventing the formation of aberrant crypt foci, a precursor of colon cancer
  • pete43lost_at_sea
    pete43lost_at_sea Member Posts: 3,900 Member
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    Nana b said:

    Yes, they sale billions of
    Yes, they sale billions of these little bottles a year. They are cheaper then most hamburger meals.

    on off on off
    aspirin is like all drugs and supplements, they have to be assessed individually.

    i am off aspirin for the time being, based on the confernece a few weeks ago as it slows down stage 1 liver detox, that i need working well as i start my heavy metal chelation.

    I will be doing a functional liver test before I go back on it, of course all my heavy metals will be cleared as well before I go back on aspirin and then I will check my liver status quarterly.

    still a good post, and a great study. and the truth about no money to fund clincial trials. alas.

    hugs,
    pete
  • janderson1964
    janderson1964 Member Posts: 2,215 Member
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    Is anyone taking asprin
    Is anyone taking asprin while on coumadin/warafin.
  • Minnesotagirl
    Minnesotagirl Member Posts: 141
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    Aspirin
    My oncologist has never mentioned aspirin to me...I will have a chat with her in April about it. She actually has never even mentioned vitamins...I just take a few and she seems o.k. with what I take ~ Fish Oil, Calcium, Vitamin D3, Vitamin B6, sellenium, sometimes Vitamin E and Vitamin C.

    She tells me to eat healthy???? Whatever...that is so open ended. I started juicing last week. I think the organic vegetables must be good...skin has a orange hue already from all the carrots. In Minnesota I need a tan anyway~ ha ha

    "Minnie"
  • Sundanceh
    Sundanceh Member Posts: 4,392 Member
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    Aspirin Therapy
    I've got a couple of personal 1st-hand stories to add to this discussion...

    My dad used to do aspirin daily to help prevent or slow the growth of polyps - his internist had recommended he start years ago when he was still doing scopes. His polyps were always pre-cancerous. I never had polpys, just one big gnarly rectal tumor. Subsequent scopes have shown zero polyps and no hint....with no aspirin taken.

    Now, aspirin thins the blood, of course...and therein could lay a problem for some. For my dad, it thinned his blood to such a degree that he ended up with a stroke (TIA). He was fortunate enough to recover, but never took aspirin again. The doctor said his blood was very thin from aspirin and that this led to some sort of leak in the brain, causing his stroke.

    Now, in my case, I've got "forever" low platelet counts. Sufficient enough to clot the ordinary stuff, though any prick bleeds alot and takes awhile to clot, longer than it would if my platelet counts were within the normal range and could handle the job, both large and small.

    So, taking aspirin to further thin the blood, puts me in more immediate danger should I suffer a traumatic event and my body is unable to clot itself...I could bleed out, like a car wreck or a severe cut or something along those lines....but the tiniest things and I bleed awhile and those aren't life threatening.

    As always, each case varies by individual. I would imagine that constant aspirin over the course of years is going to have some effect on the gastrointestinal lining and could possibly lead to an ulcer and other complications.

    Also, as we age, having thinner blood may have an adverse reaction to those of a certain age, like what happened to my dad.

    Just a couple of things to consider - the risks for some might not outweigh the risks for others. Everybody has to consider the consequences and make the best possible decisions for themselves.

    -Craig
  • wolfen
    wolfen Member Posts: 1,324 Member
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    Is anyone taking asprin
    Is anyone taking asprin while on coumadin/warafin.

    Aspirin & Coumadin
    From personal experience--My husband is a heart patient and was required to take coumadin following a pacemaker-defibrallter placement for about a year. During this time, his doctor told him not to take aspirin. The coumadin thinned out his blood to a dangerous level even with monthly testing. It is, after all, rat poison. After discontinuing the coumadin, he was put back on aspirin.

    Of course, as with everything, your doctor may have a different view on this.

    Luv,

    Wolfen
  • toyfox
    toyfox Member Posts: 158 Member
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    Platelets And aspirin
    Found this information from Wikipedia, the free
    encyclopedia about Platelets And aspirin.

    Normal platelet counts are not a guarantee of adequate function. In some states, the platelets, while being adequate in number, are dysfunctional. For instance, aspirin irreversibly disrupts platelet function by inhibiting cyclooxygenase-1 (COX1), and hence normal hemostasis. The resulting platelets are unable to produce new cyclooxygenase because they have no DNA. Normal platelet function will not return until the use of aspirin has ceased and enough of the affected platelets have been replaced by new ones, which can take over a week. Ibuprofen, another NSAID, does not have such a long duration effect, with platelet function usually returning within 24 hours,[17] and taking ibuprofen before aspirin will prevent the irreversible effects of aspirin.[18] Uremia, a consequence of renal failure, leads to platelet dysfunction that may be ameliorated by the administration of desmopressin.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Platelet
    Information listed under high and low counts