#74 Coffee: Advice for our Vice?
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- Largest included cohort study2 followed 402,260 people in US (age 50-71 years) for 14 years
- Drinking coffee was associated with several confounders (more likely to smoke cigarettes, drink alcohol, be physically inactive, and have poor diet)
- After adjusting for confounders, coffee drinkers (compared to those that did not drink coffee), had a statistically significant lower risk of overall mortality:
- About 15% relative risk reduction for 2-3 cups/day
- No dose-response relationship; risk was similar whether individuals drank 1 or 8 cups/day
- Cardiovascular deaths decreased, deaths due to cancer were unchanged.
- Decaffeinated coffee seems to convey similar health benefits, so the benefit may not be due to caffeine.2
- Similar evidence for drinking tea.5
- Evidence is from cohort studies, and therefore can only show association (not causation) with reduced mortality
- Unfortunately, a large randomized controlled trial is unlikely
- However, this evidence seems to rule out clinically important harm.
- Cancer rates: Some research suggests coffee consumption is associated with reduced rates of some cancers,6,7 while other studies find no association.7-10
- Coffee intake is also associated with a reduced risk of diabetes11 and depression.12
- Coffee use in pregnancy (particularly >4 cups/day) increases the risk of fetal loss.13 Pregnant women should be advised of this potential risk.








Coffee drinkers rejoice!
Stick with tea!
Given my love of the bean, I’ll likely live forever!