Women benefited from drinking about 4 cups daily, study suggests
By Kathleen Doheny
HealthDay Reporter
FRIDAY, Feb. 6, 2015 (HealthDay News) -- Ladies, a heavy coffee habit might do more than perk you up. New research suggests it may also reduce your risk of endometrial cancer.
Using data on more than 456,000 women from two large
ongoing studies, researchers evaluated the dietary habits of more than
2,800 women diagnosed with cancer
of the endometrium, the lining of the uterus. Compared to women who
drank less than a cup a day, those who drank about four cups daily had
an 18 percent lower risk of getting this cancer, they found.
"We were not surprised by the results that a high versus low intake of coffee
was associated with a reduced risk for endometrial cancer, because they
were consistent with what has been observed in previous studies," said
study leader Melissa Merritt. She is a research fellow in cancer epidemiology at Imperial College London in England.
"We used similar methods to investigate the
association between coffee intake and endometrial cancer as previous
studies," she said. "This is important so we can compare results across
different studies."
One trial concluded 37 ounces of coffee daily
reduced endometrial cancer risk by 18 percent. The other found a similar
reduction associated with 26 ounces a day.
The new study was published in the February issue of Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention.
Merritt's team evaluated 84 foods and nutrients.
"For most other dietary factors, there was no consistent association
with endometrial cancer risk," she said.
The researchers found a link, but not a
cause-and-effect relationship, between coffee drinking and lower risk of
endometrial cancer. And the study did not differentiate between decaf
or regular, so Merritt said she can't comment on whether one is better
than the other.
The researchers also can't say for sure why coffee may lower the cancer risk. However, one possibility is that coffee reduces estrogen levels in the body, changing the balance of hormones, Merritt said.
If the balance between estrogen and progesterone
shifts and leans more toward estrogen, the risk of endometrial cancer
rises, according to the American Cancer Society. Other risk factors for
endometrial cancer include being overweight
and having an early start to periods (before age 12) and a late
menopause. The average age of menopause in the United States is 51.
About 55,000 new cases of endometrial cancer are
expected this year in the United States, the cancer society estimates,
and about 10,000 women will die from it.
Dr.
Robert Morgan is a professor of medical oncology at the City of Hope
Comprehensive Cancer Center in Duarte, Calif. He said the new study is
"validating other studies showing coffee has a beneficial effect in
decreasing endometrial cancer." He wasn't involved in the new research.
However, Morgan added, some studies published recently have not found a link, so he believes that "the jury is still out."
He also said the possible link can't be explained, but said some experts point to the antioxidants in coffee. Antioxidants are believed to prevent or slow cell damage.
Morgan did say it's probably not just the caffeine, since other caffeine-containing foods such as chocolate have not been linked with lower endometrial cancer risk.
The study was funded by the U.S. National Institutes of Health.
Source :http://www.webmd.com
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