# Aspirin for Primary Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease and Cancer. A Benefit and Harm Analysis

**Authors:** Inge Stegeman, Patrick M. Bossuyt, Tsung Yu, Cynthia Boyd, Milo A. Puhan

PMC · DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0127194 · 2015-07-07

## TL;DR

Aspirin may provide more benefits than harms for preventing cardiovascular disease and cancer in a general US population aged 40 to 85.

## Contribution

A quantitative benefit-harm analysis of aspirin for primary prevention of cardiovascular disease and cancer in a US population.

## Key findings

- Aspirin showed more benefits than harms in preventing cardiovascular disease and cancer across age groups.
- The benefit-harm index was positive in all age categories, indicating more prevented events than harms.
- Sensitivity analyses confirmed the overall benefit of aspirin despite varying assumptions and preferences.

## Abstract

Aspirin is widely used for prevention of cardiovascular disease. In recent years randomized trials also suggested a preventive effect for various types of cancer. We aimed to assess, in a quantitative way, benefits and harms of aspirin for primary prevention of both cardiovascular disease and cancer for a general US population between 40 and 85 years of age.

We used the Gail/National Cancer Institute approach for assessing benefits and harms. This approach provides a probability that a treatment is more beneficial than harmful and incorporates multiple outcomes, the importance of these outcomes, considers different outcome risks and treats mortality as a competing risk. Our main outcomes were the risks of seven types of cancer, myocardial infarction, ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke and gastrointestinal bleeding. We obtained effect estimates from recent meta-analyses of randomized trials and used baseline risks from the Centers for Disease Control. We conducted four sensitivity analyses to assess the influence of different assumptions about outcome risks and preferences and considered the sampling variation of the effect estimates for aspirin.

The main analysis as well as the sensitivity analyses showed that aspirin has more benefits than harms. In the main analysis, the index (positive if number of prevented events > excess number of harm events over 10 years per 1,000 persons) ranged from 2 (95% CI 0.0 to 11.8; in women age 45 to 54 years) to 8 (95% CI -0.1 to 83.7; in men age 65 to 74 years). In the sensitivity analyses, the index was also positive for all age categories suggesting more benefits than harms.

This study suggests an overall benefit of aspirin for primary prevention of cardiovascular disease and cancer based on population-based data. For individual preventive counseling, additional benefit harm analyses should explore which individuals should or should not take aspirin based on their risk profile for cardiovascular, cancer and gastrointestinal outcomes and based on their outcome preferences. Thereby, risk-stratified and preference-sensitive prevention could become a reality.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** aspirin (PubChem CID 2244)
- **Diseases:** cardiovascular disease (MONDO:0004995), cancer (MONDO:0004992), myocardial infarction (MONDO:0005068), ischemic stroke (MONDO:1060198), hemorrhagic stroke (MONDO:1060199)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** COX1 (cytochrome c oxidase subunit I) [NCBI Gene 4512] {aka COI, MTCO1}
- **Diseases:** Esophageal Cancer (MESH:D004938), prostate cancer (MESH:D011471), stroke (MESH:D020521), heart disease (MESH:D006331), Gastrointestinal bleeding (MESH:D006471), Lung cancer (MESH:D008175), Myocardial infarction (MESH:D009203), Death (MESH:D003643), CVD (MESH:D002318), Colorectal cancer (MESH:D015179), Haemorrhagic stroke (MESH:D002543), gastrointestinal (MESH:D005767), GI bleeding (MESH:D006470), Cancer (MESH:D009369), Ischemic stroke (MESH:D002544), Hemorrhagic stroke (MESH:D000083302), Breast cancer (MESH:D001943), Stomach cancer (MESH:D013274), Atherosclerosis (MESH:D050197), metastasis (MESH:D009362), Pancreas Cancer (MESH:D010190), Bladder cancer (MESH:D001749)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

8 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC4494891/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC4494891