aspirin and reduction of cancer risk

Last edited 02/2022 and last reviewed 04/2022

A meta-analysis in 2014 in the Annals of Oncology (1a) added to the evidence base for reduction in cancer risk with aspirin use (1):

They found that protection against cancer starts to become apparent after taking low dose aspirin for 3 years, and a protective effect against cancer mortality is seen after 5 years

Calculated that if an adult aged 50 to 65 were to take aspirin for 10 years

  • would be a 7% (women) to 9% (men) relative risk reduction in the number of cancer, MI or CVA events over a 15 year period
  • effect was most pronounced in colorectal cancer, where it reduced incidence by 35% and mortality by 40%
  • in oesophageal cancer, incidence was reduced by 30% and mortality by 50%, and in gastric cancer these decreased by 30% and 35%, respectively
  • also found strong evidence of a smaller effect on some other cancers
    • aspirin reduced the incidence of lung cancer by around 5% and mortality by 15%, in prostate cancer incidence fell by 10% and mortality by 15%, and in breast cancer incidence reduced by 10% and mortality by 5%
  • risks of bleeding are predictably increased

Absolute reductions are obviously sex and age dependant, but they calculate that if 1,000 people aged 60 took the drug for 10 years, a further decade later (i.e. by the time they were aged 80) there would be:

  • 16 fewer deaths from cancer (NNT 63 over 10 years), 1 less death from heart attack, 2 extra deaths from bleeding (NNH 500 over 10 years)

Conclusion:

  • analysis of benefits and harms in the general population suggests net benefit for cancer prevention and reduced mortality, for a minimum of 5 years of aspirin prophylaxis between the ages of 50 and 65 with larger benefits for up to 10 years use. In particular, 'there is now overwhelming evidence for a reduction in colorectal cancer incidence and mortality from regular aspirin use'...authors claim their findings have public health potential; they estimate that if everyone over 50 took low dose aspirin for 10 years, 122,000 deaths would be prevented over 2 decades. Helicobacter pylori (present in 20% of people aged over 60) doubles the risk of bleeding due to aspirin, and the authors propose further research to look at the effectiveness of checking for HP before starting low dose aspirin

Aspirin and colon cancer

There is evidence relating to the effectiveness of aspirin as a chemoprophylaxis in people with a history of previous colorectal adenomas (2) and people with a history of previous colorectal cancer (3).

  • in persons at risk (recent history of histologically documented adenomas)
    • aspirin (81 mg daily) was more effective than placebo for reducing the risk of new colorectal adenomas (2)
      OutcomeComparisonsEvent RatesRelative Risk Reduction (95% CI)NNT (CI)
      >= 1 colorectal adenoma detectedaspirin 81 mg versus placebo38% v 47%19% (3.8 to 32)12 (7 to 60)

  • in patients with previous colorectal cancer
    • aspirin was effective for preventing the occurrence of new colorectal adenoma (3)

      OutcomeAspirinPlaceboAdjusted Hazard Ratio (95% CI) NNT (CI)
      >=1 colorectal adenoma detected17%27%0.64 (0.43 to 0.94)9 (6 to 29)

Notes:

  • a review (4) based on data from three pooled randomized controlled trials provided evidence that aspirin and NSAIDs significantly reduces the recurrence of sporadic adenomatous polyps after one to three years
    • there is evidence from short-term studies to support regression, but not elimination or prevention of colorectal adenomas in familial adenomatous polyposis
  • a systematic review (5) concluded that spirin appears to be effective at reducing the incidence of colonic adenoma and colorectal cancer, especially if used in high doses for more than 10 years. The review included observational studies and randomized controlled trials - however the randomized controlled trials failed to show a protective effect
  • a review of randomised and observational studies concluded that use of 300 mg or more of aspirin a day for about 5 years is effective in primary prevention of colorectal cancer in randomised controlled trials, with a latency of about 10 years, which is consistent with findings from observational studies (6)
  • a Chinese cohort study (n=49,679) found low-dose aspirin reduced risks of colorectal cancer and gastric cancer but increased the risk of gastrointestinal bleeding. Use of proton pump inhibitors or histamine H2-receptor antagonists eliminated the increased bleeding risk (7)

Reference: