Coffee buzz: Study finds java drinkers live longer
By
MARILYNN MARCHIONE, Associated Press
In this
Thursday, Aug. 14, 2008 photo, espresso flows into a cup at a coffee house in
Overland Park, Kan. A large U.S. federal study concludes people who drink
coffee seem to live a little longer. Researchers saw a clear connection between
cups consumed and years of life. Whether it was regular or decaf didn't matter.
The results are published in the Thursday, May 17, 2012 New England Journal of
Medicine.
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MILWAUKEE
(AP) — One of life's simple pleasures just got a little sweeter. After years of
waffling research on coffee and health, even some fear that java might raise
the risk of heart disease, a big study finds the opposite: Coffee drinkers are
a little more likely to live longer.
Regular or decaf doesn't matter.
The study
of 400,000 people is the largest ever done on the issue, and the results should
reassure any coffee lovers who think it's a guilty pleasure that may
do harm.
"Our
study suggests that's really not the case," said lead researcher Neal
Freedman of the National Cancer Institute. "There may actually be a modest
benefit of coffee drinking."
No one
knows why. Coffee contains a thousand things that can affect health, from
helpful antioxidants to tiny amounts of substances linked to cancer. The most
widely studied ingredient — caffeine — didn't play a role in the new
study's
results.
It's not
that earlier studies were wrong. There is evidence that coffee can raise LDL,
or bad cholesterol, and blood pressure at least short-term, and those in turn
can raise the risk of heart disease.
Even in
the new study, it first seemed that coffee drinkers were more likely to die at
any given time. But they also tended to smoke, drink more alcohol, eat more red
meat and exercise less than non-coffee-drinkers. Once researchers took those
things into account, a clear pattern emerged: Each cup of coffee per day nudged
up the chances of living longer.
The study
was done by the National Institutes of Health and AARP. The results are
published in Thursday's New England Journal of Medicine.
Careful,
though — this doesn't prove that coffee makes people live longer, only that the
two seem related. Like most studies on diet and health, this one was based
strictly on observing people's habits and resulting health. So it can't prove
cause and effect.
But with
so many people, more than a decade of follow-up and enough deaths to compare,
"this is probably the best evidence we have" and are likely to get,
said Dr. Frank Hu of the Harvard School of Public Health. He had no role in
this study but helped lead a previous one that also found coffee beneficial.
The new
one began in 1995 and involved AARP members ages 50 to 71 in California,
Florida, Louisiana, New Jersey, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Atlanta and
Detroit. People who already had heart disease, a stroke or cancer weren't
included. Neither were folks at diet extremes — too many or too few
calories
per day.
The rest
gave information on coffee drinking once, at the start of the study.
"People are fairly consistent in their coffee drinking over their
lifetime," so the single measure shouldn't be a big limitation, Freedman
said.
Of the
402,260 participants, about 42,000 drank no coffee. About 15,000 drank six cups
or more a day. Most people had
two or three.
By 2008,
about 52,000 of them had died. Compared to those who drank no coffee, men who
had two or three cups a day were 10 percent less likely to die at any age. For
women, it was 13 percent.
Even a
single cup a day seemed to lower risk a little: 6 percent in men and 5 percent
in women. The strongest effect was in women who had four or five cups a day — a
16 percent lower risk of death.
None of
these are big numbers, though, and Freedman can't say how much extra life
coffee might buy.
"I
really can't calculate that," especially because smoking is a key factor
that affects longevity at every age, he said.
Coffee
drinkers were less likely to die from heart or respiratory disease, stroke,
diabetes, injuries, accidents or infections. No effect was seen on cancer death
risk, though.
Other
research ties coffee drinking to lower levels of markers for inflammation and
insulin resistance. Researchers also considered that people in poor health
might refrain from drinking coffee and whether their abstention could bias the
results. But the study excluded people with cancer and heart disease — the most
common health problems — to minimize this chance. Also, the strongest benefits
of coffee drinking were seen in people who were healthiest when the study
began.
About
two-thirds of study participants drank regular coffee, and the rest, decaf. The
type of coffee made no difference in the results.
Hu had
this advice for coffee lovers:
— Watch
the sugar and cream. Extra calories and fat could negate any benefits from
coffee.
— Drink
filtered coffee rather than boiled — filtering removes compounds that raise
LDL, the bad cholesterol.
Researchers
did not look at tea, soda or other beverages but plan to in future analyses.
Lou and
Mariann Maris have already compared them. Sipping a local brew at a lakefront
coffee shop, the suburban Milwaukee couple told of how they missed coffee after
briefly giving it up in the 1970s as part of a health kick that included
transcendental meditation and eating vegetarian.
Mariann
Maris switched to tea after being treated for breast cancer in 2008, but again
missed the taste of coffee. It's one of life's great pleasures, especially
because her husband makes it, she said.
"Nothing
is as satisfying to me as a cup of coffee in the morning," she said.
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