Background: Aspirin, a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug and platelet inhibitor, has been shown to reduce cancer incidence, lower metastatic rates and improve survival in certain cancer types. However, data on the effect of aspirin on prognosis in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) are limited. Therefore, we conducted a retrospective, single-center study to evaluate the impact of aspirin use on disease characteristics and survival in PDAC patients.
Materials and methods: The study analyzed data from all consecutively treated PDAC patients over a 6-year period. Operability, Tumor-Node-Metastasis (TNM) stage, and survival endpoints were compared between patients who had used aspirin for 2 or more years prior to their diagnosis (ASA ≥ 2) and those who did not (ASA 0).
Results: A total of 182 patients were included. In the ASA ≥ 2 group, significantly fewer patients had metastatic disease at diagnosis, and a significantly larger proportion presented in the operable stages, compared to the ASA 0 group. No significant differences were observed between the two groups in the T or N stages, overall survival, disease-free survival, or time to progression-free survival.
Conclusions: Although long-term aspirin use did not influence survival endpoints, it was associated with a significantly lower probability of demonstrable distant metastases at diagnosis and a higher rate of resectable disease. This finding warrants further research to explore new therapeutic approaches for the treatment of PDAC.
Keywords: aspirin; metastasis; operability; pancreatic adenocarcinoma.
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