Regular aspirin use may reduce stomach cancer risk: researchers
Source: www.telegraph.co.uk Author: Rebecca Smith, Medical Editor Aspirin is recommended for the prevention of heart attacks in people at high risk and some studies have suggested it may reduce the risk of colon cancer. New research based on 17 studies of a total of more than 300,000 people aged between 50 and 71, found taking the drug weekly or daily reduces the likelihood of some forms of stomach cancer. In the UK there are around 8,000 people diagnosed with stomach cancer each year and most occur in people aged over 50. Rates of the cancer have halved in the UK since the 1970s but it remains extremely lethal with only 15 per cent of people surviving for five years after diagnosis. Stomach cancer is mostly associated with a bacterial infection in the lining called Helicobacter pylori. The study, published in the British Journal of Cancer also found a 36 per cent reduction in the cancer found in the middle or lower part of the stomach in people who had used aspirin at least once in the past year. People who used other drugs in the same class, called non-steriodial anti-inflammatory drugs, had a 32 per cent reduced risk of the cancer if they had taken them at least once in the past year. In contrast to results of previous studies, the researchers found that aspirin does not protect against oesophageal or throat cancer and cardia gastric cancer, which is cancer of the top of the stomach. The study authors acknowledge [...]