The Free Press Journal

Aspirin use associated with reduced risk of cancer

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Recently it has been discovered that aspirin use is associated with a significan­tly reduced risk of developing bile duct cancer, also called cholangioc­arcinoma, says ANI.

Senior author Lewis Roberts said that their study found that individual­s who took aspirin had a more than a two-and-a-half to three-anda-half-fold lesser chance of developing bile duct cancer, compared to individual­s who did not take aspirin.

Bile duct cancer is an uncommon cancer that forms in the slender tubes (bile ducts) that carry digestive fluid through the liver. The disease occurs mostly in people over 50 and can cause symptoms, such as yellowing of the skin and eyes, intense itchiness of the skin, and white stools. Bile duct cancer is an aggressive type of cancer that progresses quickly and is difficult to treat.

Dr. Roberts said that they know continuous unremittin­g inflammati­on is one of the main factors that pro- motes cancer of the bile ducts. Aspirin, with it’s an anti-inflammato­ry properties, may reduce the risk of bile duct cancer by lessening inflammati­on through inhibition of an enzyme called cyclo-oxygenase (COX), which is known to promote inflammati­on.

In addition to the COX enzyme pathway, Dr. Roberts said other studies have shown that aspirin blocks additional cell-signaling cascades that promote cancer developmen­t. But, it is not certain that aspirin is safe to use for cancer prevention. Dr. Roberts and his colleagues say additional confirmato­ry studies are needed before aspirin can be recommende­d for use in preventing bile duct cancer.

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