Moreover, we found that among people who had never had skin cancer, those who regularly used aspirin had significantly lower numbers of sunspots.
We found that people who regularly used Aspirin and other NSAIDS had significantly lower risks of developing skin cancer than people who did not use them,
What aspirin does, among its other effects, is to block the action of that COX enzyme,
too early to say this is going to be the cure for skin cancer.
In a smaller analysis, looking at people who used aspirin eight or more times a week, for at least a year, they had about a 90 per cent reduction in risk.
And so what we think it's doing is that in people who are using aspirin regularly, over a long period of time, they are actually inhibiting any little early skin cancers they might have in their skin.