Abstract

THIS ISSUE OF JAMA INCLUDES 2 ARTICLES FROM THE Women’s Health Study (WHS). This 10-year long, placebo-controlled, randomized trial of low-dose aspirin and vitamin E included nearly 40 000 predominantly middle-aged women with no history of cancer or cardiovascular disease. The WHS used a 2 2 factorial design to evaluate the effects of low-dose aspirin (100 mg) taken every other day and 600 IU of vitamin E (in the form of naturalsource -tocopherol), also taken every other day. Neither alternate-day, low-dose aspirin nor vitamin E showed any evidence of efficacy in reducing overall cancer incidence or mortality. With respect to noncancer outcomes, notable findings for low-dose aspirin included a reduction in stroke risk, no apparent effect on myocardial infarction, and an increased risk of gastrointestinal bleeding requiring transfusion. Vitamin E had no apparent effect on either cardiovascular disease incidence or on gastrointestinal bleeding. In considering the meaning of the WHS results with respect to cancer prevention, it is important to note 2 strengths of the study. First, because of its relatively large size and substantial number of outcome events (2865 cases of cancer overall, including 1230 breast cancer cases, 269 colorectal cancer cases, and 583 cancer deaths), the WHS is unlikely to have missed true important effects on overall cancer incidence, breast cancer incidence, colorectal cancer incidence, or overall cancer mortality. Second, because the intervention period lasted 10 years, an unusually long time for a randomized trial, the effects of relatively long-term lowdose aspirin treatment and vitamin E supplementation could be evaluated. This is important given that short-term effects on cancer would not necessarily be expected. Could long-term, low-dose aspirin treatment ( 150 mg/d) produce any important reduction in risk of cancer? The WHS provides strong evidence that alternate-day, low-dose aspirin treatment does not, or at least not for women within the first 10 years of treatment. There was no suggestion of reduced risk for overall cancer incidence, breast cancer incidence, colorectal cancer incidence, or cancer mortality. This remained true even in analyses restricted to the second 5 years of follow-up, when participants in the intervention group had already accrued a minimum of 5 years of aspirin exposure. To our knowledge, no other studies, either randomized trials or observational studies, have evaluated the effect of alternateday, low-dose aspirin on cancer risk. A previous, considerably smaller, randomized trial examined alternate-day use of 325 mg of aspirin and found no association with colorectal cancer incidence. However, the 5-year intervention period of this trial may have been too short to produce clear effects. Results from the WHS do not entirely rule out the possibility that taking low-dose aspirin every day, rather than every other day, could have some cancer prevention benefits. Evidence about the potential effects of daily low-dose aspirin on cancer risk is limited and includes some inconsistent findings. For example, a randomized trial found a dose of 81 mg/d reduced risk of colorectal polyp recurrence. However, analyses of pharmacy databases in the United Kingdom and Denmark found no association between low-dose aspirin use and colorectal cancer incidence. The null results from WHS with respect to alternateday, low-dose aspirin do not refute previous evidence that moderate or high doses of aspirin ( 325 mg/d) may reduce the risk of certain cancers. In numerous observational studies, regular use of aspirin has consistently been associated with reduced risk of colon or colorectal cancer, with most studies reporting 30% to 50% reductions in incidence. Two randomized trials have shown that aspirin treatment reduces the recurrence of colorectal adenomatous polyps in patients with previous polyps or colorectal cancer. Aspirin use has also been consistently associated with reduced risk of esophageal and stomach cancer, although there are fewer studies of these cancers than of colorectal cancer. The totality of the evidence from laboratory studies, observational epidemiology, and randomized trials of colorectal polyp recurrence continues to support the hypothesis that moderate or high doses of aspirin may reduce the risk of colorectal cancer, and possibly the risk of certain other cancers as well. The null results for vitamin E (in the form of -tocopherol) and cancer from the WHS add to the evidence from 2

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