Older adults who drank coffee -- caffeinated
or decaffeinated -- had a lower risk of death overall than others who did not drink
coffee, according a study by researchers from the National Cancer Institute
(NCI), part of the National Institutes of Health, and AARP.
Coffee
drinkers were less likely to die from heart disease, respiratory disease,
stroke, injuries and accidents, diabetes, and infections, although the
association was not seen for cancer. These results from a large study of older adults
were observed after adjustment for the effects of other risk factors on
mortality, such as smoking and alcohol consumption.
Researchers
caution, however, that they can't be sure whether these associations mean that
drinking coffee actually makes people live longer. The results of the study
were published in the May 17, 2012 edition of the New England Journal of
Medicine.
Neal
Freedman, Ph.D., Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, NCI, and his
colleagues examined the association between coffee drinking and risk of death
in 400,000 U.S. men and women ages 50 to 71 who participated in the NIH-AARP
Diet and Health Study. Information about coffee intake was collected once by
questionnaire at study entry in 1995-1996. The participants were followed until
the date they died or Dec. 31, 2008, whichever came first.
The
researchers found that the association between coffee and reduction in risk of
death increased with the amount of coffee consumed. Relative to men and women
who did not drink coffee, those who consumed three or more cups of coffee per
day had approximately a 10 percent lower risk of death. Coffee drinking was not
associated with cancer mortality among women, but there was a slight and only
marginally statistically significant association of heavier coffee intake with
increased risk of cancer death among men.
"Coffee
is one of the most widely consumed beverages in America, but the association
between coffee consumption and risk of death has been unclear. We found coffee
consumption to be associated with lower risk of death overall, and of death
from a number of different causes," said Freedman. "Although we
cannot infer a causal relationship between coffee drinking and lower risk of
death, we believe these results do provide some reassurance that coffee
drinking does not adversely affect health."
The
investigators caution that coffee intake was assessed by self-report at a
single time point and therefore might not reflect long-term patterns of intake.
Also, information was not available on how the coffee was prepared (espresso,
boiled, filtered, etc.); the researchers consider it possible that preparation
methods may affect the levels of any protective components in coffee.
"The
mechanism by which coffee protects against risk of death -- if indeed the
finding reflects a causal relationship -- is not clear, because coffee contains
more than 1,000 compounds that might potentially affect health," said
Freedman. "The most studied compound is caffeine, although our findings
were similar in those who reported the majority of their coffee intake to be
caffeinated or decaffeinated."
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