Cut Inflammation, Cut Cancer Risk?
< Apr.
18, 2007 > -- Two studies presented at
the American Association
for Cancer Research 2007 annual meeting
suggest that reducing inflammation may help to
prevent cancer.
Both studies were conducted by
researchers at the Mayo Clinic.
One study found that women who
regularly used aspirin developed fewer cancers than
women who did not use the anti-inflammatory medication.
Another study found that there
may be an association between lung inflammation seen
in asthma and increased risk of breast cancer spreading
to the lungs.
Both studies offer hope that managing
inflammation can help control cancer.
The first study looked at more
than 22,500 cancer-free postmenopausal women who
took part in the Iowa Women's Health Study. The study
participants provided information on aspirin and
non-steroidal anti-inflammatory medication (NSAIDs)
use.
NSAIDs include commonly used over-the-counter
(OTC) medications such as ibuprofen and naproxen.
A decade later, women who regularly
used aspirin were 16 percent less likely to have
developed cancer and 13 percent less likely to have
died of cancer than women who did not use aspirin,
the researchers found.
This same benefit was not seen
in women who regularly used NSAIDs other than aspirin,
say the researchers at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester,
Minn.
And
while aspirin helped protect former and "never smokers" from
cancer, that was not the case for women who were
active smokers.
The findings do not mean that
women should toss aside their NSAIDs or start taking
aspirin on a regular basis, the researchers say.
"This is just one study. However,
it does provide provocative evidence that regular
aspirin use may play a role in preventing the most
common chronic diseases in western countries, namely
cancer and heart disease," says study lead author
Dr. Aditya Bardia.
Previous
studies have evaluated whether aspirin or other
NSAIDs prevent specific
cancers, such as breast cancer. "But this study is
unique because we were able to evaluate comprehensive
endpoints such as total cancer incidence and cancer
mortality, which are more clinically relevant outcomes
for patients," Dr. Bardia says.
In the second study, researchers
at the Mayo Clinic in Arizona found that there may
be an association between lung inflammation seen
in asthma and increased risk of breast cancer spreading
to the lungs.
The study, which was conducted
in mice and supported by an ongoing examination of
breast cancer patient records, suggests that breast
cancer patients with asthma may be able to reduce
the risk of cancer spread by using inhaler medications.
"A link between pulmonary inflammation
and lung metastasis would not only have significant
effects on patients' diagnosis and care, but will
also immediately affect the way breast cancer patients
are treated," says study author Dr. Anna Taranova,
a senior research fellow.
"Those with asthma might be able
to reduce their risk of lung metastasis, and increase
their survival, with aggressive corticosteroid treatment," she
says.
This connection between asthma-linked
lung inflammation and cancer spread may also occur
in other types of cancers, Dr. Taranova says.
She
adds, "We suspect that the
relationship between lung inflammation and metastasis
will not be limited to breast cancer patients."
The researchers are now working
with epidemiologists at Mayo Clinic Rochester to
determine if breast cancer patients with lung metastasis
had higher than normal rates of asthma.
To
date, they have found "productive
and provocative results," Dr. Taranova says: over
20 percent of women with breast cancer who developed
lung metastasis also appear to have had a previous
diagnosis of asthma. The typical frequency of asthma
occurrence in US women is, at most, eight percent,
she says.
"Our long term goal is to continue
this detailed retrospective study of breast cancer
patients, eventually translating these studies into
a multi-center prospective examination of cancer
patients," Dr. Taranova says. "We want to define
the specific parameters that link lung metastasis
and pulmonary disease."
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