Statin use and association with colorectal cancer survival and risk: case control study with prescription data linkage
By: Fatim Lakha, Evropi Theodoratou, Susan M Farrington, Albert Tenesa, Roseanne Cetnarskyj, Farhat VN Din, Mary E Porteous, Malcolm G Dunlop and Harry Campbell

BMC Cancer 2012, 12:487 doi:10.1186/1471-2407-12-487
Published: 22 October 2012

Abstract (Provisional)

Background

In Scotland colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common cancer and a leading cause of cancer death. Epidemiological studies have reported conflicting associations between statins and CRC risk and there is one published report of the association between statins and CRC survival.

Methods

Analysis was carried out on 309 cases and 294 controls from the Scottish Study of Colorectal Cancer (SOCCS). Cox's hazard and logistic regression models were applied to investigate the association between statin use and CRC risk and survival.

Results

In an adjusted logistic regression model, statins were found to show a statistically significant association for three of the four statin variables and were found to not show a statistically significant association with either all-cause or CRC-specific mortality (OR 0.49; 95%CI 0.49-1.36; p-value = 0.17 and OR 0.33; 95%CI 0.08-1.35; P-value = 0.12, respectively).

Conclusion

We did find a statistically significant association between statin intake and CRC risk but not statin intake and CRC-specific mortality. However, the study was insufficiently powered and larger scale studies may be advisable.

The complete article is available as a provisional PDF. The fully formatted PDF and HTML versions are in production.







Copyright 2026 InterMDnet | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer | System Requirements