Aspirin, salicylates, and cancer

PC Elwood, AM Gallagher, GG Duthie, LAJ Mur… - The Lancet, 2009 - thelancet.com
PC Elwood, AM Gallagher, GG Duthie, LAJ Mur, G Morgan
The Lancet, 2009thelancet.com
Evidence from a wide range of sources suggests that individuals taking aspirin and related
non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs have reduced risk of large bowel cancer. Work in
animals supports cancer reduction with aspirin, but no long-term randomised clinical trials
exist in human beings, and randomisation would be ethically unacceptable because
vascular protection would have to be denied to a proportion of the participants. However,
opportunistic trials of aspirin, designed to test vascular protection, provide some evidence of …
Summary
Evidence from a wide range of sources suggests that individuals taking aspirin and related non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs have reduced risk of large bowel cancer. Work in animals supports cancer reduction with aspirin, but no long-term randomised clinical trials exist in human beings, and randomisation would be ethically unacceptable because vascular protection would have to be denied to a proportion of the participants. However, opportunistic trials of aspirin, designed to test vascular protection, provide some evidence of a reduction in cancer, but only after at least 10 years. We summarise evidence for the potential benefit of aspirin and natural salicylates in cancer prevention. Possible mechanisms of action and directions for further work are discussed, and implications for clinical practice are considered.
thelancet.com