The risk of developing cancer increases with age.
Factors like smoking and regular aspirin use also affect the risk of cancer – although in the opposite sense.
Researchers from the University of Basel were now able to show that aspirin use and smoking both influence ageing processes of the female genome that are connected to colorectal cancer.
The Journal of the National Cancer Institute has published their results.
Already in the 1990s, scientists discovered that regular use of aspirin over long periods of time decreases the cancer risk.
Since then, numerous studies have confirmed the protective effect of the drug against different types of cancer.
Regular aspirin use is said to reduce the risk to develop colorectal cancer by an average of 40%.
However, it is unknown how exactly the drug influences the cancer risk.
A research group led by Prof. Primo Schär, molecular geneticists at the Department of Biomedicine from the University of Basel and gastrointestinal specialist PD Dr. Kaspar Truninger, has now discovered a possible mechanism of how aspirin decreases the risk of cancer: It slows down certain ageing processes of the genome - namely modifications that also play an important role in the development of tumours.
In order to analyse the relationships between lifestyle and genome ageing, the researchers examined intestinal tissue samples of 546 healthy women over 50 years of age.
They compared age-specific changes of gene markers, so-called DNA methylations, with the women's lifestyle factors regarding aspirin use, smoking, body mass index and hormonal replacement therapy.
The most significant effects were measured for aspirin use and smoking.
Ageing Markers
“Each cell's genome resembles a library that is full of bookmarks”, explains Schär.
Thanks to these bookmarks, the cells know which genes to read, so that they can fulfil their specialised tasks as skin, muscle or intestinal cells.
“But these markers are not very stable and change during the course of age. If, at certain parts of the genome, the change is to drastic, tumours can develop”, says Schär.
In this study, the researchers were able to show for the first time that this age-related decay of gene markers can be slowed down by the regular use of aspirin.
Smoking on the other hand, accelerates the ageing process.
“Especially affected are genes that also play a role in the development of cancer”, says Dr. Faiza Noreen, research associate at the Department of Biomedicine from the University of Basel and first author of the study.
Truninger emphasises that it would be premature to start taking aspirin solely for cancer prevention without consulting a doctor first – especially when regarding the potential side effects such as gastrointestinal bleeding.
Source: Basel University
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