Cargando…

Cancer prevention with aspirin in hereditary colorectal cancer (Lynch syndrome), 10-year follow-up and registry-based 20-year data in the CAPP2 study: a double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled trial

BACKGROUND: Lynch syndrome is associated with an increased risk of colorectal cancer and with a broader spectrum of cancers, especially endometrial cancer. In 2011, our group reported long-term cancer outcomes (mean follow-up 55·7 months [SD 31·4]) for participants with Lynch syndrome enrolled into...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Burn, John, Sheth, Harsh, Elliott, Faye, Reed, Lynn, Macrae, Finlay, Mecklin, Jukka-Pekka, Möslein, Gabriela, McRonald, Fiona E, Bertario, Lucio, Evans, D Gareth, Gerdes, Anne-Marie, Ho, Judy W C, Lindblom, Annika, Morrison, Patrick J, Rashbass, Jem, Ramesar, Raj, Seppälä, Toni, Thomas, Huw J W, Pylvänäinen, Kirsi, Borthwick, Gillian M, Mathers, John C, Bishop, D Timothy
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7294238/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32534647
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(20)30366-4
_version_ 1783546444781715456
author Burn, John
Sheth, Harsh
Elliott, Faye
Reed, Lynn
Macrae, Finlay
Mecklin, Jukka-Pekka
Möslein, Gabriela
McRonald, Fiona E
Bertario, Lucio
Evans, D Gareth
Gerdes, Anne-Marie
Ho, Judy W C
Lindblom, Annika
Morrison, Patrick J
Rashbass, Jem
Ramesar, Raj
Seppälä, Toni
Thomas, Huw J W
Pylvänäinen, Kirsi
Borthwick, Gillian M
Mathers, John C
Bishop, D Timothy
author_facet Burn, John
Sheth, Harsh
Elliott, Faye
Reed, Lynn
Macrae, Finlay
Mecklin, Jukka-Pekka
Möslein, Gabriela
McRonald, Fiona E
Bertario, Lucio
Evans, D Gareth
Gerdes, Anne-Marie
Ho, Judy W C
Lindblom, Annika
Morrison, Patrick J
Rashbass, Jem
Ramesar, Raj
Seppälä, Toni
Thomas, Huw J W
Pylvänäinen, Kirsi
Borthwick, Gillian M
Mathers, John C
Bishop, D Timothy
author_sort Burn, John
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Lynch syndrome is associated with an increased risk of colorectal cancer and with a broader spectrum of cancers, especially endometrial cancer. In 2011, our group reported long-term cancer outcomes (mean follow-up 55·7 months [SD 31·4]) for participants with Lynch syndrome enrolled into a randomised trial of daily aspirin versus placebo. This report completes the planned 10-year follow-up to allow a longer-term assessment of the effect of taking regular aspirin in this high-risk population. METHODS: In the double-blind, randomised CAPP2 trial, 861 patients from 43 international centres worldwide (707 [82%] from Europe, 112 [13%] from Australasia, 38 [4%] from Africa, and four [<1%] from The Americas) with Lynch syndrome were randomly assigned to receive 600 mg aspirin daily or placebo. Cancer outcomes were monitored for at least 10 years from recruitment with English, Finnish, and Welsh participants being monitored for up to 20 years. The primary endpoint was development of colorectal cancer. Analysis was by intention to treat and per protocol. The trial is registered with the ISRCTN registry, number ISRCTN59521990. FINDINGS: Between January, 1999, and March, 2005, 937 eligible patients with Lynch syndrome, mean age 45 years, commenced treatment, of whom 861 agreed to be randomly assigned to the aspirin group or placebo; 427 (50%) participants received aspirin and 434 (50%) placebo. Participants were followed for a mean of 10 years approximating 8500 person-years. 40 (9%) of 427 participants who received aspirin developed colorectal cancer compared with 58 (13%) of 434 who received placebo. Intention-to-treat Cox proportional hazards analysis revealed a significantly reduced hazard ratio (HR) of 0·65 (95% CI 0·43–0·97; p=0·035) for aspirin versus placebo. Negative binomial regression to account for multiple primary events gave an incidence rate ratio of 0·58 (0·39–0·87; p=0·0085). Per-protocol analyses restricted to 509 who achieved 2 years' intervention gave an HR of 0·56 (0·34–0·91; p=0·019) and an incidence rate ratio of 0·50 (0·31–0·82; p=0·0057). Non-colorectal Lynch syndrome cancers were reported in 36 participants who received aspirin and 36 participants who received placebo. Intention-to-treat and per-protocol analyses showed no effect. For all Lynch syndrome cancers combined, the intention-to-treat analysis did not reach significance but per-protocol analysis showed significantly reduced overall risk for the aspirin group (HR=0·63, 0·43–0·92; p=0·018). Adverse events during the intervention phase between aspirin and placebo groups were similar, and no significant difference in compliance between intervention groups was observed for participants with complete intervention phase data; details reported previously. INTERPRETATION: The case for prevention of colorectal cancer with aspirin in Lynch syndrome is supported by our results. FUNDING: Cancer Research UK, European Union, MRC, NIHR, Bayer Pharma AG, Barbour Foundation.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7294238
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher Elsevier
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-72942382020-06-17 Cancer prevention with aspirin in hereditary colorectal cancer (Lynch syndrome), 10-year follow-up and registry-based 20-year data in the CAPP2 study: a double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled trial Burn, John Sheth, Harsh Elliott, Faye Reed, Lynn Macrae, Finlay Mecklin, Jukka-Pekka Möslein, Gabriela McRonald, Fiona E Bertario, Lucio Evans, D Gareth Gerdes, Anne-Marie Ho, Judy W C Lindblom, Annika Morrison, Patrick J Rashbass, Jem Ramesar, Raj Seppälä, Toni Thomas, Huw J W Pylvänäinen, Kirsi Borthwick, Gillian M Mathers, John C Bishop, D Timothy Lancet Article BACKGROUND: Lynch syndrome is associated with an increased risk of colorectal cancer and with a broader spectrum of cancers, especially endometrial cancer. In 2011, our group reported long-term cancer outcomes (mean follow-up 55·7 months [SD 31·4]) for participants with Lynch syndrome enrolled into a randomised trial of daily aspirin versus placebo. This report completes the planned 10-year follow-up to allow a longer-term assessment of the effect of taking regular aspirin in this high-risk population. METHODS: In the double-blind, randomised CAPP2 trial, 861 patients from 43 international centres worldwide (707 [82%] from Europe, 112 [13%] from Australasia, 38 [4%] from Africa, and four [<1%] from The Americas) with Lynch syndrome were randomly assigned to receive 600 mg aspirin daily or placebo. Cancer outcomes were monitored for at least 10 years from recruitment with English, Finnish, and Welsh participants being monitored for up to 20 years. The primary endpoint was development of colorectal cancer. Analysis was by intention to treat and per protocol. The trial is registered with the ISRCTN registry, number ISRCTN59521990. FINDINGS: Between January, 1999, and March, 2005, 937 eligible patients with Lynch syndrome, mean age 45 years, commenced treatment, of whom 861 agreed to be randomly assigned to the aspirin group or placebo; 427 (50%) participants received aspirin and 434 (50%) placebo. Participants were followed for a mean of 10 years approximating 8500 person-years. 40 (9%) of 427 participants who received aspirin developed colorectal cancer compared with 58 (13%) of 434 who received placebo. Intention-to-treat Cox proportional hazards analysis revealed a significantly reduced hazard ratio (HR) of 0·65 (95% CI 0·43–0·97; p=0·035) for aspirin versus placebo. Negative binomial regression to account for multiple primary events gave an incidence rate ratio of 0·58 (0·39–0·87; p=0·0085). Per-protocol analyses restricted to 509 who achieved 2 years' intervention gave an HR of 0·56 (0·34–0·91; p=0·019) and an incidence rate ratio of 0·50 (0·31–0·82; p=0·0057). Non-colorectal Lynch syndrome cancers were reported in 36 participants who received aspirin and 36 participants who received placebo. Intention-to-treat and per-protocol analyses showed no effect. For all Lynch syndrome cancers combined, the intention-to-treat analysis did not reach significance but per-protocol analysis showed significantly reduced overall risk for the aspirin group (HR=0·63, 0·43–0·92; p=0·018). Adverse events during the intervention phase between aspirin and placebo groups were similar, and no significant difference in compliance between intervention groups was observed for participants with complete intervention phase data; details reported previously. INTERPRETATION: The case for prevention of colorectal cancer with aspirin in Lynch syndrome is supported by our results. FUNDING: Cancer Research UK, European Union, MRC, NIHR, Bayer Pharma AG, Barbour Foundation. Elsevier 2020-06-13 /pmc/articles/PMC7294238/ /pubmed/32534647 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(20)30366-4 Text en © 2020 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Burn, John
Sheth, Harsh
Elliott, Faye
Reed, Lynn
Macrae, Finlay
Mecklin, Jukka-Pekka
Möslein, Gabriela
McRonald, Fiona E
Bertario, Lucio
Evans, D Gareth
Gerdes, Anne-Marie
Ho, Judy W C
Lindblom, Annika
Morrison, Patrick J
Rashbass, Jem
Ramesar, Raj
Seppälä, Toni
Thomas, Huw J W
Pylvänäinen, Kirsi
Borthwick, Gillian M
Mathers, John C
Bishop, D Timothy
Cancer prevention with aspirin in hereditary colorectal cancer (Lynch syndrome), 10-year follow-up and registry-based 20-year data in the CAPP2 study: a double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled trial
title Cancer prevention with aspirin in hereditary colorectal cancer (Lynch syndrome), 10-year follow-up and registry-based 20-year data in the CAPP2 study: a double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled trial
title_full Cancer prevention with aspirin in hereditary colorectal cancer (Lynch syndrome), 10-year follow-up and registry-based 20-year data in the CAPP2 study: a double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled trial
title_fullStr Cancer prevention with aspirin in hereditary colorectal cancer (Lynch syndrome), 10-year follow-up and registry-based 20-year data in the CAPP2 study: a double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled trial
title_full_unstemmed Cancer prevention with aspirin in hereditary colorectal cancer (Lynch syndrome), 10-year follow-up and registry-based 20-year data in the CAPP2 study: a double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled trial
title_short Cancer prevention with aspirin in hereditary colorectal cancer (Lynch syndrome), 10-year follow-up and registry-based 20-year data in the CAPP2 study: a double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled trial
title_sort cancer prevention with aspirin in hereditary colorectal cancer (lynch syndrome), 10-year follow-up and registry-based 20-year data in the capp2 study: a double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled trial
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7294238/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32534647
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(20)30366-4
work_keys_str_mv AT burnjohn cancerpreventionwithaspirininhereditarycolorectalcancerlynchsyndrome10yearfollowupandregistrybased20yeardatainthecapp2studyadoubleblindrandomisedplacebocontrolledtrial
AT shethharsh cancerpreventionwithaspirininhereditarycolorectalcancerlynchsyndrome10yearfollowupandregistrybased20yeardatainthecapp2studyadoubleblindrandomisedplacebocontrolledtrial
AT elliottfaye cancerpreventionwithaspirininhereditarycolorectalcancerlynchsyndrome10yearfollowupandregistrybased20yeardatainthecapp2studyadoubleblindrandomisedplacebocontrolledtrial
AT reedlynn cancerpreventionwithaspirininhereditarycolorectalcancerlynchsyndrome10yearfollowupandregistrybased20yeardatainthecapp2studyadoubleblindrandomisedplacebocontrolledtrial
AT macraefinlay cancerpreventionwithaspirininhereditarycolorectalcancerlynchsyndrome10yearfollowupandregistrybased20yeardatainthecapp2studyadoubleblindrandomisedplacebocontrolledtrial
AT mecklinjukkapekka cancerpreventionwithaspirininhereditarycolorectalcancerlynchsyndrome10yearfollowupandregistrybased20yeardatainthecapp2studyadoubleblindrandomisedplacebocontrolledtrial
AT mosleingabriela cancerpreventionwithaspirininhereditarycolorectalcancerlynchsyndrome10yearfollowupandregistrybased20yeardatainthecapp2studyadoubleblindrandomisedplacebocontrolledtrial
AT mcronaldfionae cancerpreventionwithaspirininhereditarycolorectalcancerlynchsyndrome10yearfollowupandregistrybased20yeardatainthecapp2studyadoubleblindrandomisedplacebocontrolledtrial
AT bertariolucio cancerpreventionwithaspirininhereditarycolorectalcancerlynchsyndrome10yearfollowupandregistrybased20yeardatainthecapp2studyadoubleblindrandomisedplacebocontrolledtrial
AT evansdgareth cancerpreventionwithaspirininhereditarycolorectalcancerlynchsyndrome10yearfollowupandregistrybased20yeardatainthecapp2studyadoubleblindrandomisedplacebocontrolledtrial
AT gerdesannemarie cancerpreventionwithaspirininhereditarycolorectalcancerlynchsyndrome10yearfollowupandregistrybased20yeardatainthecapp2studyadoubleblindrandomisedplacebocontrolledtrial
AT hojudywc cancerpreventionwithaspirininhereditarycolorectalcancerlynchsyndrome10yearfollowupandregistrybased20yeardatainthecapp2studyadoubleblindrandomisedplacebocontrolledtrial
AT lindblomannika cancerpreventionwithaspirininhereditarycolorectalcancerlynchsyndrome10yearfollowupandregistrybased20yeardatainthecapp2studyadoubleblindrandomisedplacebocontrolledtrial
AT morrisonpatrickj cancerpreventionwithaspirininhereditarycolorectalcancerlynchsyndrome10yearfollowupandregistrybased20yeardatainthecapp2studyadoubleblindrandomisedplacebocontrolledtrial
AT rashbassjem cancerpreventionwithaspirininhereditarycolorectalcancerlynchsyndrome10yearfollowupandregistrybased20yeardatainthecapp2studyadoubleblindrandomisedplacebocontrolledtrial
AT ramesarraj cancerpreventionwithaspirininhereditarycolorectalcancerlynchsyndrome10yearfollowupandregistrybased20yeardatainthecapp2studyadoubleblindrandomisedplacebocontrolledtrial
AT seppalatoni cancerpreventionwithaspirininhereditarycolorectalcancerlynchsyndrome10yearfollowupandregistrybased20yeardatainthecapp2studyadoubleblindrandomisedplacebocontrolledtrial
AT thomashuwjw cancerpreventionwithaspirininhereditarycolorectalcancerlynchsyndrome10yearfollowupandregistrybased20yeardatainthecapp2studyadoubleblindrandomisedplacebocontrolledtrial
AT pylvanainenkirsi cancerpreventionwithaspirininhereditarycolorectalcancerlynchsyndrome10yearfollowupandregistrybased20yeardatainthecapp2studyadoubleblindrandomisedplacebocontrolledtrial
AT borthwickgillianm cancerpreventionwithaspirininhereditarycolorectalcancerlynchsyndrome10yearfollowupandregistrybased20yeardatainthecapp2studyadoubleblindrandomisedplacebocontrolledtrial
AT mathersjohnc cancerpreventionwithaspirininhereditarycolorectalcancerlynchsyndrome10yearfollowupandregistrybased20yeardatainthecapp2studyadoubleblindrandomisedplacebocontrolledtrial
AT bishopdtimothy cancerpreventionwithaspirininhereditarycolorectalcancerlynchsyndrome10yearfollowupandregistrybased20yeardatainthecapp2studyadoubleblindrandomisedplacebocontrolledtrial
AT cancerpreventionwithaspirininhereditarycolorectalcancerlynchsyndrome10yearfollowupandregistrybased20yeardatainthecapp2studyadoubleblindrandomisedplacebocontrolledtrial