| 11 Mars 2013
 In   the Women’s Health Initiative, researchers observed US women aged 50  to  79 years for an average of 12 years and noted which individuals   developed cancer. At the beginning of the study, the women were asked   which medications they took, what they ate, and what activities they   performed.  When   Jean Tang MD, PhD, of Stanford University School of Medicine in Palo   Alto, and her colleagues analyzed available data from 59,806  Caucasian  women in the study, they found that women who took more  aspirin were  less likely to develop melanoma skin cancer during the 12  years of  follow up.  Overall, women who used aspirin had a 21 percent lower risk  of melanoma  relative to non-users. Each incremental increase in  duration of aspirin  use (less  than one year of use, one to four years  of use, and five or more years  of use) was associated with an 11  percent lower risk of melanoma. Thus,  women who used  aspirin for five  or more years had a 30 percent lower melanoma risk than  women who did  not use aspirin. The researchers controlled for  differences in   pigmentation, tanning practices, sunscreen use, and other factors that   may affect skin cancer risk.  “Aspirin   works by reducing inflammation and this may be why using aspirin may   lower your risk of developing melanoma,” said Dr. Tang. Other  pain  medications, such as acetaminophen, did not lower women’s melanoma   risk. Dr. Tang noted that the findings support the design of a clinical   trial to  directly test whether aspirin can be taken to prevent  melanoma.
A   new study has found that women who take aspirin have a reduced risk of   developing melanoma—and that the longer they take it, the lower the   risk. The findings suggest that aspirin’s anti-inflammatory effects may   help protect against this type of skin cancer. The study is published   early online in  CANCER, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer Society.









