From the Journals

Could Aspirin Help Treat Breast Cancer?


 

FROM JAMA

How Might the Findings From the A011502 Trial Impact Future Research?

Finally, and “most critically,” the editorialists raised concerns about health equity, noting the limited diversity in trial participants and the potential exclusion of subgroups that might benefit from aspirin use, particularly those more likely to experience accelerated biological aging and disparities in cancer risk and outcomes due to systemic racism or adverse social determinants of health.

They concluded by emphasizing the need to consider the intersectionality of aging, cancer, and disparities in designing future trials to advance health equity.

This study was funded by the Department of Defense Breast Cancer Research Program and the National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes of Health. The research was also supported in part by Bayer, which provided the study drug. The investigators disclosed relationships with Novartis, Seagen, Orum Clinical, and others. The editorialists disclosed relationships with Cantex Pharmaceuticals, and Pfizer.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Repeat MCED Testing May ID Early-Stage and Unscreened Cancers
MDedge ObGyn
Do Real-World Data Support Omitting Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy in Early Stage Breast Cancer?
MDedge ObGyn
No Routine Cancer Screening Option? New MCED Tests May Help
MDedge ObGyn
How Medicare Reimbursement Trends Could Affect Breast Surgeries
MDedge ObGyn
Is Axillary Surgery in Early Breast Cancer on Its Way Out?
MDedge ObGyn
Most Targeted Cancer Drugs Lack Substantial Clinical Benefit
MDedge ObGyn
Certain Women May Face Higher Risk for Second Breast Cancer
MDedge ObGyn
What’s Driving the Higher Breast Cancer Death Rate in Black Women?
MDedge ObGyn
Adding ACEI to Chemotherapy Does Not Prevent Cardiotoxicity
MDedge ObGyn
Few Cancer Survivors Meet ACS Nutrition, Exercise Guidelines
MDedge ObGyn