Risk modelling study suggests aspirin’s harms outweigh benefits for younger women

Evidence suggests that aspirin (molecular structure pictured) can reduce cancer incidence and mortality. However, its benefits do not outweigh the risk of major gastrointestinal bleeding in most women, researchers find

Emerging data show that daily aspirin reduces cancer incidence and mortality. However, the role of aspirin in primary prevention remains unclear in view of the associated increase in major bleeding.

In an attempt to answer this question, Frank Visseren, from University Medical Centre Utrecht, the Netherlands, and team used data from the Women’s Health Study to model the effect of 15 years’ treatment with alternate-day low-dose aspirin on the combination of cardiovascular disease, cancer and major bleeding events in initially healthy women.

For most women, the long-term benefits of aspirin did not outweigh the increase in major gastrointestinal bleeding. However, selective treatment of women aged 65 years and over “may improve net benefit”, conclude the authors in Heart (online, 4 December 2014)[1]
.

References

 [1] van Kruijsdijk RCM, Visseren FLJ, Ridker PM et al. Individualised prediction of alternate-day aspirin treatment effects on the combined risk of cancer, cardiovascular disease and gastrointestinal bleeding in healthy women. Heart 2014. doi:10.1136/heartjnl-2014-306342.

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Citation
The Pharmaceutical Journal, PJ, 3/10 January 2015, Vol 294, No 7843/4;294(7843/4):DOI:10.1211/PJ.2014.20067431

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