ASPirin Intervention for the REDuction of colorectal cancer risk (ASPIRED): a study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
Posted on 2017-03-29 - 04:28
Abstract Background Although aspirin is recommended for the prevention of colorectal cancer, the specific individuals for whom the benefits outweigh the risks are not clearly defined. Moreover, the precise mechanisms by which aspirin reduces the risk of cancer are unclear. We recently launched the ASPirin Intervention for the REDuction of colorectal cancer risk (ASPIRED) trial to address these uncertainties. Methods/design ASPIRED is a prospective, double-blind, multidose, placebo-controlled, biomarker clinical trial of aspirin use in individuals previously diagnosed with colorectal adenoma. Individuals (n = 180) will be randomized in a 1:1:1 ratio to low-dose (81 mg/day) or standard-dose (325 mg/day) aspirin or placebo. At two study visits, participants will provide lifestyle, dietary and biometric data in addition to urine, saliva and blood specimens. Stool, grossly normal colorectal mucosal biopsies and cytology brushings will be collected during a flexible sigmoidoscopy without bowel preparation. The study will examine the effect of aspirin on urinary prostaglandin metabolites (PGE-M; primary endpoint), plasma inflammatory markers (macrophage inhibitory cytokine-1 (MIC-1)), colonic expression of transcription factor binding (transcription factor 7-like 2 (TCF7L2)), colonocyte gene expression, including hydroxyprostaglandin dehydrogenase 15-(NAD) (HPGD) and those that encode Wnt signaling proteins, colonic cellular nanocytology and oral and gut microbial composition and function. Discussion Aspirin may prevent colorectal cancer through multiple, interrelated mechanisms. The ASPIRED trial will scrutinize these pathways and investigate putative mechanistically based risk-stratification biomarkers. Trial registration This protocol is registered with the U.S. National Institutes of Health trial registry, ClinicalTrials.gov, under the identifier NCT02394769 . Registered on 16 March 2015.
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Drew, David; Chin, Samantha; Gilpin, Katherine; Parziale, Melanie; Pond, Emily; Schuck, Madeline; et al. (2017). ASPirin Intervention for the REDuction of colorectal cancer risk (ASPIRED): a study protocol for a randomized controlled trial. figshare. Collection. https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.3679003.v2
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AUTHORS (28)
DD
David Drew
SC
Samantha Chin
KG
Katherine Gilpin
MP
Melanie Parziale
EP
Emily Pond
MS
Madeline Schuck
KS
Kathleen Stewart
MF
Meaghan Flagg
CR
Crystal Rawlings
VB
Vadim Backman
PC
Peter Carolan
DC
Daniel Chung
FC
Francis Colizzo
MF
Matthew Freedman
MG
Manish Gala
JG
John Garber
CH
Curtis Huttenhower
DK
Dmitriy Kedrin
HK
Hamed Khalili
DK
Douglas Kwon