Washington, Nov 17 ANI: Researchers at Vanderbilt
University have found that the use of aspirin and other non-steroidal anti-inflammatory
drugs NSAIDs is significantly associated with lower PSA
prostate-specific antigen levels, especially among
men with prostate
cancer.The findings are based on a study, which included 1,277 participants referred to a urologist for a biopsy of their prostate. Approximately 46 percent of the
men reported taking an NSAID, mostly aspirin 37 percent of
all men. After taking into account age, race,
family prostate cancer
history,
obesity, and other variables that have independent effects on the size of the prostate organ, cancer risk, and PSA levels, the researchers found that aspirin use was significantly associated with lower PSA levels. They found that PSA levels were 9 percent lower in men taking aspirin compared with men who did not use aspirin.A PSA test is used widely as a method to screen men for the possibility of prostate cancer, with higher
blood PSA levels suggesting a greater chance of having prostate cancer. High PSA levels can also signify benign prostatic hyperplasia BPH, a non-cancerous enlargement of the prostate organ. Although decreased PSA levels could have a protective effect, there is an aspect to this finding that could potentially be concerning."This analysis raises the concern that aspirin and other NSAIDs may lower PSA levels below the level of clinical suspicion without having any effect on prostate cancer development, and if that is true, use of these
agents could be hampering our ability to detect early-stage prostate cancer through PSA screening," said the study's lead author Jay H. Fowke, Ph.D., an assistant professor in
medicine at Vanderbilt.The study
will be presented at the American
Association for Cancer Research's Seventh Annual
International Conference on Frontiers in Cancer Prevention
Research. ANI