But from JPAD, the specific effects that are supposed to show aspirin benefits weren’t what this study measured! They were looking at:
Primary end points were atherosclerotic events, including fatal or nonfatal ischemic heart disease, fatal or nonfatal stroke, and peripheral arterial disease.
This doesn’t include anything related to cancer. And to the extent that the study did look at all-cause mortality, it showed exactly what you would expect from a relatively small (n=2539) and short (“median follow-up of 4.37 years”) trial where aspirin was yielding benefits: a large but non-statistically-significant effect
A total of 34 patients in the aspirin group and 38 patients in the nonaspirin group died from any cause (HR, 0.90; 95% CI, 0.57-1.14; log-rank test, p=.67).
I haven’t looked at the JPAD paper yet, but that Cochrane study plots JPAD results for cancer endpoints as well as major vascular and extracranial bleeds. In the same graphs I don’t see large effects.
It’s worth pointing out the general low cancer rates (in the controls as well) in the JPAD study.
But from JPAD, the specific effects that are supposed to show aspirin benefits weren’t what this study measured! They were looking at:
This doesn’t include anything related to cancer. And to the extent that the study did look at all-cause mortality, it showed exactly what you would expect from a relatively small (n=2539) and short (“median follow-up of 4.37 years”) trial where aspirin was yielding benefits: a large but non-statistically-significant effect
I haven’t looked at the JPAD paper yet, but that Cochrane study plots JPAD results for cancer endpoints as well as major vascular and extracranial bleeds. In the same graphs I don’t see large effects.
It’s worth pointing out the general low cancer rates (in the controls as well) in the JPAD study.