| May 30, 2007
Medical News Today
Aspirin's Colorectal Cancer Prevention
Mechanism Revealed By Study
Aspirin therapy's ability to reduce the risk of colorectal cancer,
an association seen in a large number of studies, appears to depend
on the drug's inhibition of the COX-2 enzyme, the action that also
underlies aspirin's usefulness for treating pain and inflammation.
In the New England Journal of Medicine, investigators from Massachusetts
General Hospital (MGH), Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Brigham
and Women's Hospital report that regular aspirin intake only reduced
the incidence of colorectal tumors that overexpress COX-2.
"We knew that aspirin can block COX-2 function and that COX-2
is present in the vast majority of colorectal tumors but not in
normal colon tissue," explains Andrew Chan, MD, MPH, of the
MGH Gastrointestinal Unit, the paper's lead author. "Therefore
we hypothesized that, if blocking the COX-2 pathway was the mechanism
underlying aspirin-associated risk reduction, it should preferentially
reduce the incidence of those tumors that rely on COX-2."
To investigate that theory, the research team compiled data from
two ongoing prospective research studies - the Nurses Health Study
(NHS) and the Health Professionals Follow-Up Study (HPFS). Both
studies gather comprehensive health information on their participants
every two years, which is analyzed for associations between factors
such as diet and the incidence of several diseases. Both the NHS,
which enrolls more than 120,000 female registered nurses, and the
HPFS, following more than 50,000 men employed in the health professions,
have previously found associations between aspirin intake and reduced
colorectal cancer risk.
For the current study, the researchers focused on almost 83,000
NHS participants and about 47,000 HPFS participants for whom necessary
information was available. They received permission to acquire medical
records and pathology reports from those who had reported being
diagnosed with colorectal cancer, then retrieved more than 600 pathology
specimens from participants whose diagnoses could be confirmed.
The samples were analyzed for expression of COX-2.
As seen in previous reports, among the more than 120,000 participants,
those who took at least two standard aspirin tablets a week had
about three-quarters the risk of colorectal cancer that aspirin
non-users did. However, analysis of tumor samples showed that reduction
in risk only applied to tumors that expressed COX-2. The incidence
of COX-2-negative tumors was virtually the same among those who
did and did not take aspirin.
"These results will allow us to test another hypothesis: that
in patients who have had colorectal cancer or polyps in the past,
expression of COX-2 in the earlier lesion might indicate those for
whom aspirin could reduce the risk of recurrence," says Charles
Fuchs, MD, MPH, of Dana-Farber, the study's senior author. "Answering
that will be our next target."
Both researchers note that current evidence does not support generally
recommending aspirin therapy to reduce colorectal cancer risk. "For
most people, the best way to prevent colorectal cancer is through
screening, which we know saves lives by allowing us to treat polyps
before they become cancers," says Chan.
Fuchs adds, "An individual who has had colorectal cancer in
the past is at higher risk for subsequent tumors, and that might
be someone who should discuss the advisability of taking aspirin
with his or her primary care physician. We hope that our future
research will further clarify who would benefit most from regular
aspirin therapy and that understanding the mechanism of this effect
will lead to new preventive and treatment strategies."
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