Aspirin Cuts Bowel Cancer By 50%
This is for those who have a predisposition to bowel cancer. It can
have side effects too. Not bad for birch bark.
http://www.foxnews.com/health/2011/10/28/aspirin-can-cut-bowel-cancer-risk-by...
Aspirin Can Cut Bowel Cancer Risk by
Half, Study Says
Published October 28, 2011
Aspirin cuts the chances of developing bowel cancer by more than half in
people with a family history of the disease, British scientists said Friday.
"We've now got the cherry on the cake -- the randomized controlled trial
that sets out to try to prove that [aspirin prevents cancer] and did so,"
said Sir John Burn, of Newcastle University, northeastern England, who led the
study.
His team looked at 861 people with Lynch syndrome, an inherited
predisposition to cancer. Even though aspirin can cause internal bleeding, Burn
said that the case for such people to start taking it was "overwhelmingly
strong."
"If you give them all aspirin, you prevent 10,000 cancers but cause
1,000 ulcers," he said. "That's a good deal."
A large study last year concluded that a daily dose of just 75 milligrams of
aspirin could cut death rates for all cancers by a third. Burn's team gave
patients 600 milligrams of aspirin a day, which they believed was likely to show
a bigger effect in preventing cancer. He is now starting a trial to determine
the ideal daily dose.
Burns said that he was already taking aspirin, which was likely to be most
effective if taken from a patient's late 40s or 50s.
"Before anyone begins to take aspirin on a regular basis they should
consult their doctor as aspirin is known to bring with it a risk of stomach
complaints, including ulcers," he said. "However, if there is a strong
family history of cancer then people may want to weigh up the cost
benefits."
Half of the 861 people in the study took two aspirins (600mg) a day, for
varying lengths of time. Ten years after they began taking the pills, there had
been 19 cancers among people who had taken aspirin, and 34 among those taking a
placebo. Among those who took the drug for at least two years, there were 10
cancers in the aspirin group and 23 in the placebo group.
The effect began to be seen five years after they started taking aspirin and
persisted well after they stopped, researchers reported in .
How exactly aspirin prevents cancer is unclear, but Burns believes that
compounds found in the drug trigger genetically damaged cells to destroy
themselves at a very early stage.