Daily Aspirin Use Linked
With Pancreatic Cancer
By Maggie Fox
Health and Science Correspondent
10-27-3
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Women who take an aspirin a day -- which millions do
to prevent heart attack and stroke as well as to treat headaches -- may
raise their risk of getting deadly pancreatic cancer, U.S. researchers said
on Monday.
The surprising finding worried doctors, who say women will now have to talk
seriously with their physicians about the risk of taking a daily aspirin.
Pancreatic cancer affects only 31,000 Americans a year, but it kills
virtually all its victims within three years.
The study of 88,000 nurses found that those who took two or more aspirins a
week for 20 years or more had a 58 percent higher risk of pancreatic cancer.
"Apart from smoking, this one of the few risk factors that have been
identified for pancreatic cancer," Dr. Eva Schernhammer of Harvard Medical
School and Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, who led the study, told a
news conference.
"Initially we expected that aspirin would protect against pancreatic cancer,
especially since its preventive role in colorectal cancer has been well
documented. However, now it appears that we need to examine the relationship
more thoroughly," Schernhammer added in a statement.
"This finding does not mean that women should no longer use aspirin. There
are still important benefits to the drug; we also need other large cohort
studies to confirm our finding before we can draw any conclusions."
Schernhammer and colleagues presented their findings to a meeting in
Phoenix, Arizona, of the American Association for Cancer Research.
They studied 88,378 women taking part in a large and wide-ranging study of
nurses and their health.
Over 18 years, 161 of the nurses developed pancreatic cancer.
Those who took 14 tablets or more per week had an 86 percent greater risk of
pancreatic cancer than non-users. The nurses who took between six and 13
tablets had a 41 percent higher risk, while those who only took one to three
aspirins a week had an 11 percent greater risk.
The women who took the most aspirin said they were taking it not to protect
against heart disease, but because of headaches or other aches and pains.
Even with the increased risk, heart disease is a much greater threat to a
woman's, or a man's, health. It is by far the biggest killer in the United
States and other developed nations. The American Heart Association says
cardiovascular disease killed more than 945,000 Americans in 2000.
Doctors do not clearly understand what causes pancreatic cancer, or what
makes it so deadly. Obesity is another risk factor, but Schernhammer said
her team's findings held regardless of a woman's weight, whether she smoked
and whether she had diabetes.
Schernhammer noted that one study showed that regular aspirin use may cause
pancreatitis -- an inflammation of the pancreas that can sometimes lead to
pancreatic cancer.
"There is urgent need to settle the biologic reasons for pancreatic cancer,"
she said.
Copyright � 2003 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved.
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