| Literature DB >> 35328014 |
Davide Serrano1, Paola Patrignani2, Vittoria Stigliano3, Daniela Turchetti4, Stefania Sciallero5, Franco Roviello6, Alessandro D'Arpino7, Ignazio Grattagliano8, Salvo Testa9, Cristina Oliani10, Lucio Bertario1, Bernardo Bonanni1.
Abstract
Cancer prevention in the era of precision medicine has to consider integrated therapeutic approaches. Therapeutic cancer prevention should be offered to selected cohorts with increased cancer risk. Undoubtedly, carriers of hereditary cancer syndromes have a well-defined high cancer risk. Lynch Syndrome is one of the most frequent hereditary syndromes; it is mainly associated with colorectal cancer (CRC). Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and, in particular, aspirin use, has been associated with reduced CRC risk in several studies, initially with contradictory results; however, longer follow-up confirmed a reduced CRC incidence and mortality. The CAPP2 study recruited 861 Lynch syndrome participants randomly assigned to 600 mg of aspirin versus placebo. Like sporadic CRCs, a significant CRC risk reduction was seen after an extended follow-up, with a median treatment time that was relatively short (2 years). The ongoing CAPP3 will address whether lower doses are equally effective. Based on pharmacology and clinical data on sporadic CRCs, the preventive effect should also be obtained with low-dose aspirin. The leading international guidelines suggest discussing with Lynch syndrome carriers the possibility of using low-dose aspirin for CRC prevention. We aim systematically promote this intervention with all Lynch syndrome carriers.Entities:
Keywords: aspirin; colorectal cancer; lynch syndrome
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35328014 PMCID: PMC8952565 DOI: 10.3390/genes13030460
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.096
A schematic representation of the main guideline recommendations for colorectal cancer preventive medicine with aspirin.
| Organization | Reccomandations |
|---|---|
| United States Preventive Services Task Force | Adults aged 50–69 years with 10 years CVD ≥10% * |
| Cancer Council Australia | People aged 50–70 years with average risk of colorectal cancer ** |
| National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE guideline) | People with Lynch syndrome |
| BSG/ACPGBI/UKCGG | Lynch Syndrome carriers |
| EHTG/ESCP | Lynch Syndrome carriers |
* For the age range 60–69 has to consider the latency of 10 years before to lower colorectal cancer risk, together the other variables. ** The decision to start the treatment should be personalized based on: age and life expectancies since the benefit is evident after 10 years; sex male may have longer beneficial effect; parallel reduction in cardiovascular events; concomitant risk of aspirin side effects. *** Higher dose for overweight individuals.
Schema of Pros and Cons to consider for aspirin as cancer prevention agent in LS carriers.
| Variable | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|
| Age | <60 years old | ≥60 years old |
| Genotype |
| |
| Sex | M/F | Child bearing or desire of pregnancy |
| Allergy | No | Known NSAIDs ipersensibility |
| Helicobacter Pylori | Negative | HP positive |
| Cancer history ** | Previous syndromic cancer including CRC | protocolectomy |
| Cardiovascular risk *** | ≥10% | -- |
* PMS2 is opinioable for is moderate risk; ** Cancer disease free survival ≥ 5 years and non-evidence of recurrences; *** based on available algorithms like Framingham Risk Score.